Monday, April 24, 2006

quota-unquota dept.

Reservations may be on the cards for the private sector and IIT/IIMs. Leave aside the inevitable emotional outcry, I'm trying to understand the implications from a sociological point of view.

This may be a bad idea for small or fledgling companies. Most companies start out as ventures between friends, or families, many of them from the same community. It may be a good survival strategy during this nascency to depend on people you know and trust.

For larger companies, it may not make much of a difference. Most companies rely on the top 10% (just a figure with no empirical backing -- an intuitive guess) of the employees to do most of the decision making, and the rest mostly follow their lead. In such a case, apart from changing the demographics of the bottom 90%, reservations would really have no effect on the quality of output of the company.

Similarly for the IIT/IIMs, the difference will be in the racial/caste composition of the bottom 70-80% of graduates, and won't matter in the larger scheme of things.

So if you are high-caste, and of average ability, you have to make way for someone from a lower caste who is somewhere around the same level as you. Considering the fact that high-castes in India have been enjoying a monopoly on higher learning for centuries, you would expect their progeny to be more enterprising in keeping that lead by working harder.

3 comments:

The Shaolin said...

Hey Anshuman, a different perspective here: I support job reservations, but...

Jeet said...

Anshuman:

Your statement :
In such a case, apart from changing the demographics of the bottom 90%, reservations would really have no effect on the quality of output of the company.

Implies that quota students will always be in the bottom 90%. Kaafi khatarnaak statement hai. I am sure you didn't mean that :-)

W0lf said...

No. That's not what I'm saying at all.

If you look at how companies are organized, the managing core is always composed of people who know each other and who self-select each other.

Now if you impose a restriction on how these people will fill all the available positions in a company, its inevitable that they will choose to staff the least critical positions in a company to fill the reservation quota, and leave out the critical jobs to hire based on pure merit/fitness for the job.