The Department of Posts is hard at work on a turnaround plan. But is the
pace and mode of change enough? Will it succeed anytime soon in
re-engineering services to become competitive and increase revenues?
THRUST ON TURNAROUND
The main post office in Mysore, renovated under
Project Arrow. The government is adopting multiple strategies to revive
the Department of Posts
India has the largest postal network in the world.
However, in recent years, growing access to inexpensive telephone
systems, and options such as e-mail, have reduced popular dependence on
the system — and sent the Department of Posts into the red.
Total
volumes, both domestic and international, of letters in physical form
and parcels, have grown manifold. But much of it has gone to private
operators. The DoP’s market share has fallen significantly.
Ranging
from exploiting the vast potential of the post office network in rural
areas to using information technology and changing the service and
product profile, many measures have been adopted to make a turnaround
and to bring it out of the red. Indeed, the results have started
showing: in the last fiscal, the DoP recorded the sharpest fall in
losses in the last decade. Its revenue surged by 13.62 per cent to Rs.
7,910.51 crore, while the expenditure stood at Rs. 13,705.4 crore.
Still, the deficit was Rs. 5,794.89 crore.
The
government is seeking to achieve the turnaround through a multi-pronged
approach. The seven-fold growth in the number of post offices from
23,344 at the time of Independence to 1,54,866 (as on March 31, 2011) is
proving to be an asset.
Most of these post offices,
1,39,040 of them (89.78 per cent), are in rural areas, with the
remaining 15,826 in urban areas. The network is being used to increase
the reach of various social and financial schemes.
The
expansion, especially in rural areas, has also been brought about by
opening part-time extra-departmental post offices. Post offices now
offer mail, retailing, savings bank, life insurance and remittance
services, in addition to delivery of social security benefits such as
pensions and wages under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment
Guarantee Scheme. As many as 5.59 crore MGNREGS accounts were opened in
post offices, and wages amounting to Rs. 7,860 crore was disbursed to
beneficiaries during 2011-12 through 98,491 post offices.
On
an average, a post office in India serves an area of 21.23 sq km, and a
population of 7,814 people. The 5.6 lakh-strong workforce enjoys a
special bond with the masses, especially in the interiors.
Financial
models are being altered to lower operational costs. In urban areas,
franchisee outlets are being opened where it is not possible to open a
regular post office.
The DoP launched Project Arrow
“to achieve a big increase in both customer satisfaction and employee
satisfaction with India Post.” The project seeks to cover 2,500 post
offices by March 2012 and 7,500 post offices during the 12th Plan
period. It envisages a pan-India network that is flexible enough to
support future applications that will ensure greater accountability and
productivity through the use of technology and improve working
conditions.
The Mail Lighthouse Project was the
second major initiative to be undertaken. It seeks to optimise the mail
network. The three-year programme was launched in 2010 to optimise the
postal network from collection to delivery; standardise processes with
focus on significant quality improvement and reduction in network
complexity; and to establish a performance culture using key performance
indicators and regular reviews. It also aimed to modernise “the look
and feel’’ of the postal services and infrastructure.
To
streamline its bread-and-butter area of mail operations and improve the
quality of mail-related services, the Mail Network Optimisation Project
was initiated in March 2010. This involves the standardisation of
processes and development of a performance monitoring system.
The operational network for Speed Post and other categories of mail has been restructured.
The
DoP intends to computerise all departmental post offices, mail offices,
administrative and other offices and establishments, under its
Information Technology Modernisation Programme. This also envisages
provision of connectivity through Rural ICT solutions to enable
electronic networking of nearly 1,29,500 extra-departmental branch post
offices.
With 99.26 per cent of the 25,154
departmental post offices having been computerised by March 31, 2012,
the DoP is looking to capitalise on this by making post offices the
focal point of delivery of social security schemes.
Its
revenue share falling in the core area of mail distribution due to the
proliferation of courier companies that took away a large part of the
business, and the arrival of cheaper and faster communication options of
phones and e-mails that have reduced dependence on paper-based
communication, the DoP has also taken to the use of technology to face
the challenges.
Telecom Minister Kapil Sibal wants
the DoP to address the twin challenges of technological modernisation
and diversification. He also observed that while GIS mapping, tracking
of mails, automation of sorting services and standardisation of parcels
is being worked upon, there is a need to re-engineer the postal service
to keep it competitive and increase its sources of revenues. The DoP is
using technology to reach out to people, Sachin Pilot, Minister of State
for Information and Communications, asserts.
The
DoP’s road map for the 12th Plan period indicates that the
transformation process for making India Post a pivotal player in the
area of communications, logistic and governance has started. But the
challenge is to make the best of the enviable network of post offices
that has been built up and utilise the personnel who know their turf
well and who often have a special bond with the people they serve.
But it is bound to be a long haul, and the challenges before the government are quite steep.
Source : The Hindu, August 26, 2012
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