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Happy
tidings have arrived from Delhi indicating the decision of the Central Cabinet
to privatise Air India. A very bold decision for a vital economic reform that,
perhaps, only this government could take blocking the drain that it had become
on government finances.
Though
crowned a “Maharaja”, recent reports indicated as if the national carrier Air India
had gone bankrupt. An order of a consumer forum given at the state level and
later confirmed by the Central Forum for payment of Rs. 15,000/- as
compensation to a petitioner for deficiency in services exposed the Airline’s
financial ill-health. A cheque issued by it in compliance of the order bounced
for the reason that the account had no balance. Like the feudals of yore the
so-called “Maharaja” has been hit by inclemency.
It is indeed in bad shape. A news item
recently said that the staff are going to cut down on their allowances and
perks in order to improve the Airline’s financial health. One supposes this
kind of realization among the staff has come rather late in the day. It was the
excesses of the pilots, the cabin crew and other serving or retired employees
during its heydays that contributed in no mean manner to usher in the current
difficult times of the Airline.
A
report in the Telegraph of United Kingdom said that some of the “staggering”
losses of Air India were due to exceptionally generous staff benefits. Pilots
used to stay in five-star hotels in the US and would commute only in
limousines, serving and retired pilot and crew would take business class seats
ahead of paying passengers. There was a time when paying business class passengers
would be shunted off to rival airlines at Air India’s cost to accommodate the
airline’s own staff. Thus the largesse distributed after negotiations with the
unions practically did the Airline in. On top of that there were the demands of
the politicians, bureaucrats and other VIPs for special considerations
regardless of the costs. One cannot also forget Air India’s “free companion
service” which the supposed VIPs made generous use of.
There were various views that were being aired
regarding the Airline’s future. An overwhelming section wanted its
privatization as otherwise its revival, if attempted, would set the government
back by as much as Rs. 52000 crores. But the thinking in the government was for
reviving it, whatever, it took. The government seemed to have been of the
opinion that it should have an airline which could be used in times of
emergency. There have been several instances when the planes of Air India were
used to rescue Indian citizens from hostile and dangerous situations in foreign
lands. If privatized the government would have no hold on the airline resulting
in developments that could turn out to be uncomfortable for it. More
importantly, politicians perhaps did not wish to let go of a milch cow that
remained at their beck and call and offered unabashed preferential treatment to
them.
Surviving
on the bailout package of Rs. 30000 crore provided by the last UPA government
in 2013, its continuance as a public sector airline seems to be uncertain. Niti
Ayog has suggested outright divestment and privatization of the airline.
Nonetheless, the government is trying to monetize the Airline’s vast assets in
India and abroad. Only recently The Pioneer reported the Airline’s assets sale
plan had badly floundered. No bidders came forward to participate in the
auction of the national carrier’s properties at prime locations in Mumbai,
Bengaluru and Thiruvanantapuram. The Airline had planned to raise around 80
crores from its fixed assets monetisation plan but this has, for the time
being, failed to materialise – a rude setback to the airline.
The larger question, however, is how a
thriving and reputed airline as Air India slid down to such a level that it has
had to contemplate hiving off of its solid assets to raise a few crores.
Pritish Nandi, a poet, a movie maker, a painter, an admirer of Air India as it
used to be and a past MP to boot, has put it succinctly in one of his recent
blogs that things started going drastically wrong for the Airline as
competition arrived. While, according to general belief, competition improves
standards and the existing companies prepare themselves to take on the new
arrivals.
Unfortunately,
this did not happen with Air India, not because it was incapable of facing
competition but because it was “strongarmed” by its political masters to cede
ground to its competitors in which they had developed stakes. Nandi, therefore,
comes to that unmistakable conclusion that Air India did not “lie down” and
allowed itself to die; it was “murdered in broad daylight” so that its rivals
could gain. While the air traffic was burgeoning, instead of readying itself to
meet the new traffic surge, it allowed the “ministry” to give away the traffic
to others. The untenable excuse was “globalization and an open skies policy”.
This
contention finds an echo in the Neera Radia tapes which the Income Tax
department recorded while snooping on Radia’s Vaishnavi Consultants. The
department happened to stumble upon the murky dealings of the Civil Aviation
Ministry. Radia had become privy to goings on in the Civil Aviation Ministry
when Praful Patel and his cronies were trying to get into Air India Rattan Tata
to hold and take the blame for the mess they had made. As Tata used to be
Radia’s client she had researched Air India and had come to the conclusions
that painted Praful Patel as the villain.
According
to Radia, the politicians who were involved in the deals would have sold the
airline to its competitors. She points her fingers at Jet Airways and King
Fisher airlines. The idea was to “strip” its assets and then hand over the
Airline to Naresh Goel and Vijay Mallya. The bilateral agreements on profitable
routes had already been handed over to a Middle-Eastern airline for which the
protagonists raked in, according to Radia’s estimates (and one has no reason to
suspect her judgment), around $ 3 to 4 hundred million.
This
is not all. Even when the Airline was performing at a loss it was made to place
orders with various manufacturers for as many as 111 planes. Radia asks where
would they have flown the planes to, (including Boeing 787 Dreamliners with a
capacity to fly more than 300 passengers) when all the profitable routes had
been sold off. The talk at that time was how could an airline with turnover of
just Rs. 7000 crore go on an aircraft buying spree costing Rs. 70000 crore.
Some of these aircraft have later been sold and taken back on lease in order to
pay back the loans. That does not help much; while the Airline’s finances (as
also its reputation) were ruined those in authority, the villains, walked away
with the kickbacks.
The
CBI has now commenced Preliminary Enquiries (PE) against unknown people to
investigate purchase of 111 aircraft for Air India at a cost of Rs. 70000
crore; leasing large number of aircraft without proper justifications; and handing
over of profit-making routes to foreign private airlines.
All
these investigations might take a few months or even years. But the most
crucial man who has never been investigated is Praful Patel during whose tenure
irreparable damage was done to the Airline. All that may eventually take place
in God’s own time but in the meantime one must celebrate the government’s
decision.
*Photo from internet
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