Tuesday, September 5, 2023

Teachers' Day - The Eternal Day

 

Prof. E.K. Warrier, T.A. Purushotham, S.Subbaramaiah at the S.V. University (1960)

THE DAY TO REMEMBER FOR LIFE &

THE PRAYERS THAT REMAIN LONG.

‘Acharya Devo Bhava’.  “Guru Brahma Guru: Vishnu, Guru: Sak Shaath Parabrahma:”. Parents are the first Gurus and I bow to them day-in and day-out and all life for, these Gurus took my hand , opened my mind, and remained in my heart.

During the childhood there were teachers who taught me alphabets and who did not spare their rod for being late to the school or for correcting a mistake! No complaints on the Child Rights for my parents told me that I had only responsibility and not right at that age, for the right to honourable life had to be earned the hard way.

K. Keshava Rao, my father’s English Teacher taught me English Grammar - Wren & Martin was the Bible in front of me in my class IX at the Mc Lauren High School, Kakinada. Earlier was the most fortunate year when I had the privilege to learn Telugu language under Indraganti Hanumatsastry in class VIII. He made me win the District Debating Competition on the subject -- Voting Right for the Youth, Right or Wrong -- at the inter-school District Competition.

At Mrs. A. V. N. College, Visakhapatnam, where I studied Intermediate (1955-57) K. Swaminathan, Lecturer in English, Prof Diwakarla Rama Murthy, brother of Diwakarla Venkatavadhani (Osmania University fame), Ramhbhatla Lakshmi Narayana were my teachers in Telugu and how can I redeem my debt for introducing me the depth and charm of the language that has no barriers in the globe?

Moved to Tirupati for my graduation and post-graduation in Economics. T.A. Purushotham's inaugural address on the opening day of the College defining the words TIME and CHARACTER shaped my life.



Acharya Rayaprolu Subba Rao, 



Pingali Lakshmikantam, G.N. Reddy, Jeereddi Chenna Reddy taught me old poetry,  modern poetry, prose, and non-detailed text respectively, Prof. M. V. Rama Sarma, E. Nageswar, Mrs. M. Suryakanta, Lecturers in English, Prof. M.S. Prakasa Rao, who earned the title ‘Laddu of Public Finance’ in Pachiappa’s College, Madras,   Prof. E. K. Warrier, Dr. S. Subbaramaiah, and B.N. Yugandhar (IAS latter),



 were all my teachers in my graduation and post-graduation at the Sri Venkateswara University College, Tirupati (1958-62) who made me what I am today.

Dr. C.S. Venkata Ratnam  and Prof V. Balamohan Das, of the Commerce Department guided me into PhD at Andhra University, Visakhapatnam, while I was at work. Prof. B. Sarveswara Rao, Prof. G. Parthasarathy (EPW fame), were my  mentors.

The will to write became part of me because of all these teachers. When I close my eyes, I see their bright eyes, hear their voices, recall their corrections in my essays of the school and college days, the direction they gave me not just on the stage when I acted in a few plays - Galsworthy’s Strife in College Days, and ‘Pedda Manushulu’ in Telugu on Vijayawada and Hyderabad theatres,


 but to my life. My teacher Prakasa Rao insisted that whenever I write, I should keep in mind, whether I have a single message to convey couched in understandable language, a story that stays in the readers’ minds for long. He always used to say; “Keep your flame burning” but not to burn you. Watch the word you say and it will save you. I am yet to become a great writer! Not just today, I pray my teachers everyday to give me the energy and thought that enriches the society I live in. The warmth, the affection and the blessings all these teachers who made my life are eternal.  

Wednesday, August 9, 2023

Pressing the interest rate button? Wait for a day.

 

Will the RBI again pause the Rates?

Subbarao, the past Governor of the tumultuous times, authored a book on ‘Who moved my Interest Rates?’ Will the present Governor Shaktikant, acclaimed as the best central bank governor while the other central banks are still in uncertain policies, author another book ‘Who paused my interest Rates? Really, a big question mark. Can inflation be hounded by the RBI or for that matter any central bank in the world? The day of reckoning is tomorrow.

I am reminded of my childhood days when my father got my chappals (footwear) resoled with less cost than a new one and it used to last for one more cycle of use. Restitch the saree to make frocks for the daughters when the head of the household gets tired of using the saree for more than four or five occasions. How can the lady go to functions with the same saree?

European Commission 2008 quoted in a World Bank blog of 19th September 2022 mentions: “national authorities must pay attention to measures that can facilitate the recovery of the so-called secondary raw materials or end-of-waste materials” arguing for a circular economy. https://blogs.worldbank.org/allaboutfinance/inflation-and-ecological-transition-european-perspective-part-ii?CID=WBW_AL_BlogNotification_EN_EXT

Is growth complacency driving this aspirational $5trillion economy? Is inflation in a growing economy an imperative? Should the RBI Monetary Policy Committee stick to the boundaries of inflation +/- 2 percent of 4 percent? Next quarter, are we going to see the soaring prices of tomato ketchup, tomato sauce, tomato soup and other processed foods using tomato base, touch the roof? Should the RBI see the warning signals more clearly?

Five states are bound for elections in the next few months and are in a mood of competitive populism. Once the schedule is out of the Election Commission  pigeon, several incentives directed to engage the voters have to halt. Make hay while the Sun shines. States within the FRBM norms hasten to implement their agenda pre-election.

GoI is comfortable with its GST earnings month after month. It cares little for whatever the economists say on federal relations and implementation of the recommendations of the Fifteenth Finance Commission. Consumption of durable goods is on the rise. With the festive season ahead, markets are preparing to stock as much as possible from the rural markets that are buzzing with economic activity. Farmers are increasingly adopting latest technologies aided by solid support from a few states like Telangana.

Crorepatis increased and even a tomato farmer of Karnataka, a press report says, bought a car worth Rs.45lakhs within a month’s sale of this crop. But the poor who are still around 240mn and the lower middle class are unable to make both ends meet. They seem to be toying with the idea of recycling the useable instead of replacing their old TV or nearly worn out durables with the new ones.

Can tomatoes and onions be recycled? My wife says: Tomatoes, if bought when cheap, can be sliced and kept in the deep fridge to last for more than six months. Pull them off, wash them with water at room temperature, they can be used as good as fresh tomato slices. But onions, by nature are more durable but storing them in a fridge stinks. There is no way to recycle. Prices of many vegetables soaring beyond the common man’s pocket at the moment can neither be stored nor recycled.

The latest buzz word in the US is super core inflation and James Powell argued for unemployment as a solution, ludicrously. Efficacy of inflation targeting remained an uneasy solution to the rising prices of all daily consumables.

An interesting discussion in OECD Economic Outlook Vol. 22 of 2022 highlights the current difficulties in targeting inflation post pandemic as both supply and demand factors pushed the inflation.

A S&P Rating Agency’s recent report says that the days for low interest rates and easy credit in Asia-Pacific markets are ending. India is largely demand-driven economy and the recent service sector PMI hovering above 65 is a strong evidence. PMI manufacturing is steady at 57.7 in July 2023.

Politics of economic growth in India cannot afford the luxury of inflation pushed either through hiking the interest rates or a dominating fiscal policy. Will these considerations bat for a pause in the interest rates or reduce by a tad, to please the tomato buyer by 10 to 20 basis points?

*The author is an economist and risk management specialist.

 

 

 

Friday, July 28, 2023

SBI The Old and The New

 I have the pride and honour of serving for 28 years, the State Bank of India, till February 1994 and as a pensioner for the last 29 years. I see vast difference in the way the Bank deals with its customers from then to now – both internal and external. It has one of the biggest balance sheets among its peers as on 31st March 2023 and with very low NPAs. There is speed of service for those who help themselves. SBI celebrates 75 years of independence, Azadi ka Amritotsav with a unique gesture of giving a pension bonus for those who are above 75years according to the cadre at which they retired. We, the old-SBI-ites thus had a pleasant surprise in that it still could remember that generation despite the generational divide and technology disruption.

On the 8th June, 2023 we heard the news that its Chief Financial Officer, Attar resigned from the Bank. In fact, his appointment raised several eyebrows couple of years back, because he came from a consulting experience with Ernst & Young and banking experience with its rival ICICI Bank. Conflict of interest is not ruled out. This is a governance issue. 

For those who visit the Personal Banking branch, one stares at long ques. Technology of which we are all proud of, looks a harrowing experience for the staff. The staff, despite all good intentions feel helpless many a time because the system just does not respond.

The SBI I worked at was ‘the largest bank for the smallest man’. There were concept branches dedicated to Agricultural and SSI sectors. It’s primacy in these two areas and domain expertise whittled away with not many field level managers and staff having no time to visit the villages and enterprises. They do not have much time to discuss with them their problems. Most problems are left for the system to resolve.

The SBI today is SBI plus seven Associate Banks merged with it assimilating seven work cultures. Both are thus entirely different. I am reminded of a Chairman who said a few years ago: “We are a technology company. Banking also we do.” Very true. There are more retail loans, personal loans, vehicle loans, more housing and real estate, and corporate loans. Property and Collateral verifications take more time than client interactions. There is little time for the small segment, who need most the banking services. ‘Its old slogan:” the biggest bank for the smallest man” is consigned to history. Anything small, except where it is a regulatory responsibility, is not to their taste.

Now SBI does little of banking as all the staff and managers look to the machines for instructions. If the machine fails to respond, the employee or manager has no answer for the banking problem that the customer faces. If one wants to post a grievance on the system, there is a drop-down menu. If you can’t click one of them, in ‘others’ you have to post in just 100 letters. The CACHE appears and you copy it. It disappears directing you to re-input. There is also a cultural transformation.

If a pensioner wants to see the Chief General Manager, he has to seek appointment through a letter either by mail or email. Earlier, pensioner could telephone and seek his time and meet him. Both the SBIs are different on several counts.

Earlier, there used to be Customer Committees meeting on the 15th of every month. They have become things of the past for the last five years.  

I gave an auto-debit instruction for my Electricity Bills. For fifteen years, it worked well. During the last three months the compliance is whimsical. It pays one bill and the other bill of the second meter is not paid. I had to pay a penalty on that count Rs.150 in the next bill!! If I want to change the auto debit instruction, branch does not have a mechanism to do it nor does it appear in the Standing Instruction menu of my internet account. Branch Manager, after spending lot of time and contacting even the system administrator could not resolve it.

SBI Pensioners’ Monthly Bulletin, Hyderabad has a banner line calling the pensioners for securing their ID cards both for the family and self, if alone, through MYHRM portal. The portal is the most unresponsive portal. It rarely works for loading all the inputs needed. When the ‘forgotten password’ is clicked either on mobile application or on desktop, it does not respond.

In fact, all the data that is required is in the form of KYC with the pension paying branch. Pensioner’s details should be available with the HR department. Further, even the spouse’s data likewise is available with the KYC where the pensioner and spouse have joint account and nominee details of the spouse, where the latter is the nominee, on the other deposit accounts held with the Bank. With so much of advanced technology and the Bank mentioning that they have AI application also for a decade, where is the need in the first place, for this harassment of the pensioner on the MYHRM portal? Can’t the Bank pull the data from the branch account of the pensioner? Photo, Aadhar, PAN, residential proof are all available with the Bank Branch.

During the first year of YONO it was ‘you’ for the bank and ‘no’ for the customer. It took two years to make it work efficiently and by this time, the UPI system overtook its strides. I am reasonably tech-savvy but fail to catch up with the SBI HRM portal.

Still, going by the call for a joint ID card with my spouse, I loaded all the details. The outcome is a disaster. My date of pension is wrong: Instead of 28.02.1994, it mentions 31.08.1997. Where from the data is produced, no one knows. Regarding my spouse data that has been faithfully loaded to MYHRM after great difficulty nearly six months back, her details are left blank, when the card is issued. 

I had to give up the card telling the branch manager, that I can do without the pensioner ID with my spouse details incorporated, as we have other IDs.

The staff who should have closed their systems at the end of the day at maximum 5pm sit till even 7pm entering KYC of new accounts or responding to printed requests of service!! They curse the system they work with day-in and day-out, but in silence. This is more because they continue to focus more on the sale of third party products like Insurance, Mutual Funds, Pension Funds etc.

I am writing this note with the hope that the Bank would make better use of technology and help many of my ilk not facing such risk.  Instead of being complacent, the Bank should introspect and it is not correction that is required but total replacement of its technology to stand in competition with its peers HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank.

Pensioners’ Association left a helpful note that those who have difficulty in accessing the MyHRM portal can seek its help in the Association office.

Is this necessary? Doorstep service to the pensioners announced by the RBI is in circulars. Can’t the tech-savvy bank think of better way of helping its customers and pensioners?

There are many unsung heroes. It’s time to have pity on them and find systemic remedies. I wish the Bank would regain its pride of place in the industry.

*The views are personal.