However, attempts to achieve cost cuts through laying off workers on daily wages, who are not exactly paid huge salaries in any case, will not amount to much. Pakistan’s largest industrial unit and a legacy of the fallen Soviet Union, the PSM will not be able to turn around its fortunes after one small dose of cost-cutting. It needs to pay off billions in dues to the SSGC — the main reason why its recent attempt to increase capacity utilisation hit a break — before gas pressure to the steel mills is restored. Little seems to have been done to resolve that serious issue. When the Chinese examined the affairs of the PSM, they blamed an inefficient management for its woes. What they did not say was that workers on daily wages needed to be the first to go. The fear that workers on the lower tier, and not those responsible for the sorry affairs of the PSM, will be told to take a hike has now gained weight. Laying off a few hundred workers will not reduce costs by much, and at the same time will also convey the intentions of a government, which too many times in the recent past, has appeared to have run the country like a business.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 31st, 2016.
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