| Cement
dispatches up 10% in April-December
Financial Express
Despite higher ad valorem duties at the beginning of this fiscal coupled
with import threats, the cement industry continued to maintain its steady
growth of 10% in despatches for the nine-month period between April-December
2007. Led by southern and northern states, the cement despatches during
the period went up to 121 million tonne as against 112 mt during the same
period last fiscal. This is despite there has been a sizeable addition
of nearly 7 mt during the said period.
Led by Gujarat with a growth of 18%, the western region has reported a
growth of 16% in despatches during the nine-month period. Interestingly,
the western region had, during the same period last fiscal, reported a
growth of only 11%. Maharashtra followed Gujarat with a growth of 15%.
The next region to report remarkably higher growth has been the southern
region with a growth of little over 11.5%, followed by northern region
(11%) and central region (5%). The eastern region has reported only 2%
growth during the period.
Among the states, Haryana has reported the highest growth in consumption
at 21%, followed by Andhra Pradesh (19%) and Gujarat (18%). The other
important states which reported a strong growth include Tamil Nadu (16%),
Maharashtra & Madhya Pradesh (15%).


Plan
to digitise your PF may get burial today
Indian Express
It
was considered a model in e-governance, the largest reform project in
the government in terms of complexity, in a department that touches the
lives of 4 crore citizens — the Employees’ Provident Fund
Organisation. It was meant to provide you online access to your PF account
and service your withdrawal claims within days. It was inaugurated by
former President A P J Adbul Kalam, former Prime Minister A B Vajpayee
but seven years, six Labour Ministers and about Rs 25 crore later, the
UPA government is set to scrap the project — and start all over
again.
“Reinventing EPF India” envisaged a complete overhaul of the
creaking business processes and ancient manual accounting systems as well
as computerisation of the 56-year-old organisation. Tomorrow, the EPFO’s
Central Board of Trustees will consider a proposal “for immediate
termination of the contract” between EPFO and Siemens Information
Systems Limited (SISL), the consultant hired to implement the project
in 2001. Ironically, this proposal is based on a recommendation by a panel
set up by the Labour ministry last year to suggest ways to expedite the
project. The panel is headed by V K Gupta, CSIR’s I-T division head.
The
immediate provocation for the termination: last October, SISL asked for
an extra Rs 6 crore — which was accepted by the EPFO — but
then it added a demand of Rs 21.49 crore compensation for delays it said
it was not responsible for. These delays stem from the EPFO’s inability
to provide comprehensive data to help in the transition from manual to
digital processes.
So
what’s Plan B? The sub-committee has proposed a step-by-step modernisation
approach involving all 112 EPF offices simultaneously with the help of
the Government’s National Informatics Centre. NIC, incidentally,
doesn’t have a record in accounting and management process restructuring.
Originally
to be completed in 22 months in six pilot locations, the project is more
than 66 months behind schedule, largely due to bureaucratic bungling,
ministerial neglect and sabotage by the department’s insiders wary
of losing their fiefdoms. While it was slightly behind schedule by May
2004, under the UPA, the project has been completely derailed.
In
the project’s chequered history, this is not the first time a committee
was set up to monitor progress. Earlier panels included then Nasscom chief
Kiran Karnik, NIIT chairman P Rajendran, former CVC N Vittal and Gulshan
Rai. After the Gupta sub-committee assessed problems on both the software
front as well as on EPFO’s front, the Director General of NIC held
discussions with EPFO and SISL for finding ways to push the project forward.
SISL
had to make some changes in software design, EPFO had to pay for the changes
and fix practical deadlines for delivering the required data from its
end. In October 2007, SISL said another Rs 6 crore would be needed to
make the system work and the original contract was to be modified. Last
month, when SISL sent EPFO its draft modifications to the contract with
redefined milestones, one clause sought additional compensation for delays
not attributable to SISL from the date of the original pact till the new
one of Rs 21.49 crore.
At
a meeting on December 19 with senior SISL executives, it was conveyed
that the former’s delay liability demand indicated it was moving
towards arbitration rather than resolution. The very next day, the sub-committee
met again and decided SISL’s demand was unacceptable and the contract
be terminated. When approached, Labour Minister Oscar Fernandes directed
that the EPFO Board take a decision on the matter since it had not only
granted all necessary clearances for the project but also condoned the
delays in the project till recently.
Incidentally,
UPA’s first Labour Minister Sis Ram Ola sacked the Central PF Commissioner
Ajai Singh who was championing the reforms simply because Singh made a
presentation to Planning Commission Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia
where he pleaded for the modernization project to be taken under the wing
of the Prime Minister’s Office.


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