It’s common
to hear that things need to be changed drastically, that the whole existing
structure has to be thrown out, a whole new generation of people has to be
brought in, and so on. This attitude developed especially during the 1980s
onward, when leaders like Thatcher in the UK
and Reagan in the US
attacked the entrenched interests and structures that were resisting the open
or liberal economy. With the collapse of
the soviet socialistic bloc and the exposure of the weaknesses of centrally
planned economies, many other countries, even communist China in the 1980s and
quasi-socialist India in the 1990s, decided to switch to less controls, more
free market in their economic systems. The initial success of this change-over
encouraged people to search for those critical ‘game changers’ that were
required to set them on a totally different growth path. Thus the tendency
during the recent decades for the drastic transformation as the spirit of the
times, bolstered by ideas such as the American economist Schumpeter’s concept
of the ‘destructive creativity’ of capitalism.
But here’s
the thing: in our daily lives, we may not have such opportunities all the time.
There are some situations in which, perhaps, a sudden and drastic change of the
set up is possible and even desirable (my favourite example is using a change
of place to stop habits like smoking!), but mostly drastic changes are a big
challenge and an imposition in themselves, rather than a boost to a whole new
trajectory. So much of the average person’s effort and ingenuity has to be
dedicated to just arranging matters again after a change The transactional
costs, in other words), that little is left over for a grand new venture.
Indeed, one has to use all the strengths and resources garnered in the old
system to stabilize the new structure, so there is no thought of jettisoning
the old completely. The more the change, the more of the same thing, as the wag
so wisely remarked (I think it was Oscar Wilde, in French). As we grows older,
the range of possibilities also contracts inevitably and inexorably, so once
again we’ve got to work with what you have rather than dream of starting afresh
on a clean slate.
Each one of
us has a severely limited scope of drastically transforming our circumstances.
Mostly, the external world is a given, and we have to settle for some idea of
our place in it and the extent that we can draw support from it. It may appear
that a drastic change of job, or place, or spouse, would open up our lives, but
it may be more resource-effective to instead list out the positives in our
exiting situation first ‘before giving up our day job’, as the saying goes. This
does not mean that we should never embrace change; the point is that we should
check first whether we have really extracted all that is possible from the
existing situation, and whether we honestly expect something more or better in
the new situation. If we have been ineffective or neglectful in addressing
difficulties and bottlenecks in the past, how are we sure that similar
obstacles will not crop up in the future scenario as well?
That is, we
should avoid the blunder of comparing the worst of our existing situation with
the best of another (mostly) imagined set up. A sober analysis should include
both potential losses and gains, the ‘pros and the cons’ of each alternative,
and then strike a balance. Unfortunately, as societies modernize, the
individual is freed more and more to pursue their individual, private search
for the best deal, leading to such social changes as higher divorce rates and
lower commitment to others’ interests, and so on. Psychological disorders,
stress, suicides, and so on are often
indicators of this (futile) quest for the ‘pot (of gold) at the end of the
rainbow’. Alas, there is no end of the rainbow, not pot, no gold, but perhaps
beneath your feet at the very place you are standing on, there is something, a
possibility of improvement.
I can cite
a couple of examples. A new ruler, they say, starts by rearranging his
generals. A modern state does not have this luxury of seeming action, but there
is a great temptation to start ‘new’ institutions. I put that in quotes,
because, as Oscar Wilde hinted it’s very often the same old same old, just
dressed up in new colours to fool a believing public. A classic example (for
the Indian context) is the winding up of the Planning Commission of India by
the Modi (NDA) government, maybe because
the new PM felt that the Commission’s petty functionaries had exercised too
much budgetary control on the elected state political leadership. But here’s
the irony: they went ahead and set up a new institution called the National
Institute for Transforming India (acronymed NITI, which means ‘policy’ or
‘strategy’ in Hindi/Sanskrit), but with the same staff and infrastructure. They
could as well have saved themselves all the trouble and bad press, and just
clipped the mandate of the original Planning Commission -- an incremental
change (see this article of mine on forestry in the Planning Commision). Of late, the ruling party has come round to the realization that they
can’t bulldoze through drastic changes without taking the opposition along, and
they seem to be climbing down from a ‘game-changer’ to an incremental mode! The previous UPA government, too, was a captive
of the ‘game-changer’ syndrome, as they tried to repeat the success of the 1991
liberalisation strategy in the 2000’s; the tendency was to berate existing
institutions like the existing civil services, the research institutions, the
public sector undertakings, the existing infrastructure, schools, colleges, and
so on, trying to shift much of this to the private sector and NGOs, and so on.
The constant criticism of existing structures only served to spread a pall of
gloom about the country’s situation, so that indeed the UPA government could be
said to have snatched a resounding defeat from the jaws of victory in the 2014
elections.
Unless
you’re a leading business magnate who can hire and fire regardless of other
considerations, you will have to pursue change within the constraints of
keeping the existing institution going --
it may be a corporation, a lab, an academic institution, or anything. Take
a research institute: you may think this one has to be closed down and a new
one started ithout all the baggage, but there is no doubt that the new
institute will also suffer from the same problems, whether it is budgetary
support, or recruitment of the best personnel, or lack of financial delegation,
or interference from others, or whatever. Much of the administrative effort in setting up a new institution – getting the
statutory clearances, finding land, finances and other resources, setting up a
management structure, procuring hardware, and so on – would be a waste of time,
as you would only end up again at the beginning, at ground zero, as it were,
and would have to face all over again all those problems that bedevilled the
old institution.
It might
well be a much wiser use of the limited managerial resources, and your own
limited time and tenure, to actually deal with the real problems in the
implementation of the ongoing programmes of the existing institution, in an incremental fashion. Trying to wind up
the old institution would not only sap your own energies and waste your own
time and talents, but also create a huge hostile force that would have a stake
in your failure. The corrosive effect of the negative ‘narrative’ required to trash the existing institution would
also have far-reaching, and damaging, effects on the credibility and morale of
the new set up as well.
Of course,
if you are mentally decided on a change,
then perhaps no rational analysis is going to slow you down; but would be
advisable to limit such impulses to the relatively minor decisions like getting
a new car or computer or smartphone!