Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Wages in the Central Bank and universities

, The Island

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By Usvatte-aratchi

In 2011, there were 1441 employees in the Central Bank and they were paid Rs. 2, 250, 029,000 as shown in the published accounts of the Bank. Then on average an employee was paid Rs. 1,560,000 per year, an average monthly pay of Rs. 130,000. Of all employees 11% were Minor Employees: drivers, peons and others. Those not minor employees fell into two categories: Staff Class and Non-staff Class, roughly equivalent to professional and general service categories. There were 646 employees in the Non-staff Class and 629 in the Staff Class. There were 4 employees on fixed term contracts, who were not classified. That makes up the 1441.

Of all employees in the Staff Class, 17 percent [109 out of 629] had no post secondary education, whatever. Of them 83 were in Grade I, 23 in Grade II and 3 in Grade III and none in the highest grade, Grade IV. They are generally those promoted from the Non-staff Class on account of outstanding work in that class and promise of good work at higher level s of responsibility. Of all employees in the Staff Class, 28 [4 percent] had professional qualifications, without a first degree. Then 137 out of 629 [22 %] had no first degree. 248 [40 percent of 629] had only a first degree; 80 [13 percent] had a university degree and professional qualifications; 124 [20 %] had a post-graduate degree; and 32 [about 5 %] had a post-graduate degree and professional qualifications. Those in Staff Class who had qualifications beyond a university first degree comprised 38 percent of all in that class. Those with only a first a degree constituted 44 percent of the total, considering those with a professional qualification and no university degree as having obtained a university degree. Then 61 percent of the staff in the Staff Class had no education beyond a first degree from a university.

Let us try to establish the average wage paid to an employee in the Staff Class in the Bank. We know that the average wage of all employees was Rs.130,000 a month [2, 250, 029,000 (1/12, 1/1441). Let us ASSUME that minor employees were paid on average Rs.30,000 a month. Their total monthly wage bill would be Rs.4,860,000. Let us also ASSUME that the average wage of an employee in the Non-staff Class was Rs.75,000, 2.5 times the average wage of a minor employee. They would be paid Rs.48,450,000 a month. That leaves Rs.144, 192,500 to be paid to 629 employees in the Staff Class, giving them an average wage of Rs.229,000 per month. That works out to three times the average wage paid to an employee in the Non-staff Class and about eight times the average wage of an employee in the Minor Employee category. These multiples do not look grossly unlikely.

It is necessary to emphasize repeatedly that these wage rates are what I have ASSUMED that staff in the Bank are paid. I have used only figures available to anyone from published sources [Central Bank Annual Report 2011, page Part II-62] and I have not spoken to my friends presently in the Central Bank employ or were so employed at any time past. These figures are consistent with published accounts of the Central Bank for 2011.What is meant by consistent is that when any two wage rates are assumed, the third is determined for you with the residual obtained from figures publish by the Bank. There are three sets of staff, Minor Employees, Non-staff and Staff. Let us call their wage rates M, N and S. If you assume wage rates for M and N as I have done, S is determined for you. If you assume wage rates N and S, the wage rate M is determined. And if you assume wage rates N and S then the rate M is determined for you. It follows that if I have assumed too low a wage rate for minor employees [Rs.30,000 a month] , then the average wage for Staff Class is over estimated. If I have assumed too low a wage rate for Non-staff class, then too, the resultant wage rate for the Staff class is too high. The argument can be extended with different assumptions, almost ad infinitum.

Consistency in that manner I have shown is no demonstration that the figures I have assumed are right. I think they are not far wrong. Of course, the Central Bank can advise the public the correct figures, much to the latter’s enlightenment. After all, it is their money and they have a right to know how they are spent.

To get back to the comparisons. The relevant category for comparison with university teachers is the Staff Class. All university teachers have at least a university degree, First Class or Second Class Upper Division and most have some post-graduate education. In the Central Bank, 78 percent of employees in Staff Class have at least a university degree and 40 percent of them have had some post graduate education. A reasonable guess I have presented is that employees in the Staff Class receive about Rs.225,000 per month. This is also the average wage rate, which is paid to the 60 percent of employees who have no more than a first degree and some less. We have learnt from Professor Amal Kumarage of Moratuwa that from October 2012, a Senior Professor, the highest level of employment as an academic in a university, will be paid about Rs.150,000 per month. A senior professor has one or more higher degrees, often including a Ph.D. degree, which is not true for staff in the Central Bank. That difference in wages does not seem fair and certainly seem wrong incentive-wise. An assistant lecturer in a university, often with no more than a good first degree, will receive, Professor Kumarage assured us, close to Rs. 50,000 a month, a far cry from what a new recruit to the Central Bank must be receiving. A bright academic with a good first degree and a Ph.D. from a good Faculty has every incentive to take the first plane out of Katunayake. At the same time there is no clear evidence that there has been any large scale culling of staff at the Central Bank as they age, for whatever reason, including the search for higher wages. In 2011 no more than 11 [of 1441] staff members resigned from the Bank. If their current wages were too low, then there should have been a much higher turnover of staff. These wages are not essential to keep them employed at the Bank. The average age of employees in Staff Class Grade IV and III is 51 years and those in Grades II and I, 41 years. The latter category includes 106 persons [out of 472] who were probably promoted from the Non-staff Class and therefore older. If there were high turnover, we must see a much younger age profile for staff in this category. The argument concerning incentives will need more justification to hold water. Work in the Central Bank is not fraught with unpleasantness greater risk to permit a higher risk allowance, to justify the higher wages.

The comparison between wages earned by employees in the Staff Class in the Central Bank and university academic staff make convinces me that university academic staff deserve relatively higher wages. The inability of universities to recruit some 3,000 [?] staff to its cadre year after year is evidence of poor wage incentives, among other things.

I have a more intimate knowledge of work in the Central Bank than in universities, although I am not completely unfamiliar with work in universities, either here or overseas or indeed, the history of universities anywhere over the last 800 years. I spent my first 3 years as an economist at the Central Bank of Ceylon and the Central Bank very generously provided for my education in Cambridge. I Iearnt the first letters of the economics alphabet in Peradeniya. I have always found universities very civilized places, havens in the midst of all the storms of noise and clutter outside. Walk through the tall gates of Columbia College in Upper Manhattan, drive into Yale College in New Haven or walk into Colombo University and you know you are in a place of civilization. Best of all are university towns. Drive into Swarthmore College about 15 miles out of Philadelphia, a huge city, Princeton in Princeton, New Jersey, through the great gates of King’s, Trinity or St. John’s in Cambridge and many another to realize the validity of what I say. So my loyalties are evenly divided between Central Banks and universities and this note bears witness to that tension. However, the comparison between wages received by employees in the Central Bank and in Universities makes me convinced of the case for higher wages to academic staff in Universities now.

Possible solution for university problem

, The Island

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By Dr. Manodha Gamage

Months have passed by, yet a solution seems to be distant. Since I have been lecturing/teaching at various universities and institutions local as well as overseas, over the last two decades, I thought of sharing some of my thoughts on some of the issues of the lecturers of the national universities in Sri Lanka. As of now I am a senior lecturer at visiting capacity both in leading national and private engineering universities in Sri Lanka. My field of expertise is Telecommunications Engineering and ICT. Therefore most of the ideas I express here are more relevant to these technical fields.

According to my experience as an undergraduate at the University of Moratuwa and as a Senior Lecturer, I would say that the best of the lecturers are those who have academic qualification and working experience in the relevant industries. Therefore, when recruiting the senior lecturers to the national universities, it is not only the PhD that matters but also the ability to teach, the working experience and exposure in the relevant industry. Just as the engineering students undergo industrial training during their undergraduate courses, the university lecturers and professors from time to time should take breaks from their teaching and work in the industry for a few months.

Even though the general impression is that the best scholars in an engineering batch would decide to do PhDs and stay in the university as lecturers, the reality is slightly different to that. This is mainly due to the mismatch of the salary structures in the industry compared to the universities. In the Telecommunication industry, up until recent years, fresh engineers were paid at least more than double the salary of a fresh graduate joining the university staff as a probationary lecturer. This gap would rapidly increase as they accumulate more experiences. This is a huge drawback to attract the best quality lecturers to the national universities. This gap may not be that high in some fields and may not even exist in certain other fields, such as the arts stream. I must admit that I haven’t done a study in other disciplines and doing such a study is equally important when trying to solve the issues at hand.

If you are to really benefit from the free education, we must try to get the best in each discipline as the lecturers of the universities. The more logical solution to attract the best professionals in each field to the national universities to coach the future generations is to place the salaries of the university lecturers on par with the market salaries of each discipline. In other words it may be necessary to pay a higher salary to a lecturer of a Telecommunications Department of the university, than to a lecturer in the arts faculty, simply because of the attractive alternative demands for good engineering graduates. In simple terms, the university academics in different fields such as Engineering (even in engineering there are many disciplines namely Electronics, Telecommunications, Electrical, Computer Science, Chemical, Material, Civil, Mechanical etc. etc.), Medicine, Accounting and Management, Law, Economics, Physical Sciences, Agriculture etc. etc. could be placed on different salary scales that are comparable with the respective industry. Easier said than done! I know the difficulty of getting the consensus of the academics to such a proposal. Yet my suggestion to make this differentiation is explained below.

Now the FUTA is demanding the government to spend 6% of GDP for education. Rather than criticizing this demand, I would, and I am sure everybody would agree that we need to invest more in education, if we have any goals set for our country to develop faster in the future. Also most people criticize the FUTA that they don’t propose any project if the government decides to invest more in the future. My suggestion is that we should seriously think of building state of the art R&D Centers in Sri Lanka. Definitely we should do more research in the fields of Telecommunications, ICT etc. and there must be many other suitable and relevant disciplines to do further research and develop new technologies and methodologies useful to Sri Lanka. The initial step is to appoint a committee mainly comprising the university academics and industry experts to decide on these relevant disciplines. Those are the disciplines that have higher demand for the undergraduates coming out of the university system each year.

Once those disciplines are identified, we should decide the disciplines that should be combined together to accommodate in a single R&D Center. The factors such as the relationships of the disciplines, the present locations of the universities that possess the expertise in each discipline, the investment available etc. would determine the number of R&D centers to be built and their locations.

Once these R&D centers are built, any academic can work in them, while they continue to do their lecturing and normal work at the universities. There could be full time researchers in them too. As of now most academics teach in small private institutions (so called affiliated universities) during their spare time as the salaries of the National Universities are not sufficient. But actually the academics should be spending more time on research & development than in teaching. This could be done only if R&D is well recognized in the country and well compensated. If this doesn’t happen sooner than later, the development goals of this country would be merely a dream. Therefore R&D centers are a need of the hour.

At this juncture the strike of the academics is continued mostly because there is no exit window. I think it is high time President Mahinda Rajapaksa intervened to have a discussion with the FUTA as this has become a national issue. A proposal to build R&D Centers would be an attractive offer to FUTA’s demand for more investment in education, and may be committee of academics could be appointed to study further and bring in to carry out a feasibility study. The time-lines also could be decided for the project. In addition to this, the salaries of last 3 months (during the strike period) could be offered to the FUTA members. If this is done this strike could be ended in a win-win situation.

FUTA and the opposition

, The Island

The UNP, JVP and DNA have joined the protest marches and meetings organised by FUTA.

Does it say that that they would have granted the demands of FUTA if they (UNP, JVP and DNA) were in power?

B S Perera

FUTA denies SB’s claim dons are returning to work

, The Island

by Dasun Edirisinghe

Conflicting claims have been made by University teachers and Higher Education Minister S. B. Dissanayake over the strike by the Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA)

While the striking dons maintain that no one has broken ranks, lured by Minister Dissanayake’s offer that their salaries for the past three months’ will be paid if they report for work immediately, the Higher Education Ministry said a number of lecturers had returned to their duties yesterday.

President of the Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA) Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri told The Island that all universities remained paralysed and FUTA members were on strike.

"We were at the Jaffna University yesterday and not a single lecturer heeded the Minister’s offer," he said.

FUTA launched the strike on July 04.

Several discussions with Higher Education Minister S. B. Dissanayake, Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa, Presidential Secretary Lalith Weerathunga and the Labour Commissioner have so afar failed.

University lecturers held a protest march from Galle to Colombo last week to force the government to grant their demands.

When contacted for comment, Secretary to the Higher Education Ministry Dr. Sunil Jayantha Navaratne said that a number of lecturers had returned to work yesterday heeding the minister’s request.

He said that Science Faculty of the Colombo University and Medical Faculty of the Ruhuna University had re-commenced academic activities yesterday as lecturers had returned to work.

"A section of university lecturers requested their salaries for the last three months," Dr. Navaratne said, adding that they could not pay salaries while the dons were on strike.

Lecturers who returned to work from yesterday would be paid the salaries for the last three months, he said.

Dr. Navaratne said that they felt the situation would improve and 80 per cent of lecturers would be back at work by the end of this week.

FUTA takes their case to Mahanayakes



By Cryil Wimalasurendre, The Island

KANDY – The most venerable Mahanayaka Theras of Malwatta and Asgiriya, who met a delegation form the Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA), yesterday afternoon expressed their willingness to forward the striking dons’ demands to President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Malwatte Mahanayake Tibbatuwawe Sri Siddharatha Sumangala asked the FUTA delegates to send the prelates a written request containing the demands that should be forwarded to the President.

He asked whether FUTA whether some kind of compromise was not possible.

The prelates told the FUTA deputation that they were willing to mediate in the issue particularly because the trade union action of the university teachers affected the children who were seeking higher education.

A majority of the entrants to the universities were underprivileged children. They were affected by the strike of the University teachers, the prelates said.

The FUTA delegation was led by deputy president of the association Ven. Dambara Amila Thera, who told Mahanayake Theras that the dispute had dragged on for over three months without a solution because the Higher Education Minister S. B. Dissanayake remained intransigent.

The deputation told the prelates that FUTA preferred to hold talks with Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa since he had come out with proposals that could be agreed upon for a negotiated settlement.

Even the Secretary to the Finance Ministry Dr. P. B. Jaysundara had been flexible during talks the FUTA held with him previously, the FUTA delegates said.

The figures of salaries paid to the university dons, claimed by Higher Education Minister were wrong, the deputation told the prelates.

They said that FUTA did not demand the allocation of six percent of GDP for education overnight.

The deputation added that the university teachers were not ready to return to work or evaluate the GCE A/L examination answer scripts while they were on strike.

Prof. Ven. Hanguranketha Dheerananda Thera together with Ven. Dr. Dambara Amila Thera, Prof. Nawaratne Bandara, Prof. Rohan Fernando, Dr. Terrence Madujith, Dr. Jeevaka Samankumara Dr. Anurakumara, Dr. Rangana Alwis and several others represented the FUTA.

Dons who helped MR become President led FUTA protest – UNP

, The Island

by Zacki Jabbar

University teachers who had publicly campaigned to elect Mahinda Rajapaksa President had been in the forefront of last week’s protest march from Galle to Colombo by the Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA), the UNP said yesterday.

Gayantha Karunathillake MP, told a news conference in Colombo that the academic community, which once believed and campaigned for the ‘Mahinda Chintana’ had walked over a 100 km from Galle to Colombo, to protest against the indifferent and step motherly treatment meted out to a vital sector such as education.

The ‘Mahinda Chintana’ which pledged to make education one of its main priorities had obviously been eaten by the very "rats" that had helped draft it, he noted.

Karunathillake said that the education system from Grade one upwards was faced with some crisis or the other resulting in teachers and students being subjected to mental degradation.

The Ministers of Higher Education and Education, ably assisted by the state media, were insulting FUTA for its reasonable demand that six percent of the GDP be allocated for education, the MP said adding that it could easily be done, if waste and corruption in the State sector, from the top downwards, was weeded out.

President Rajapaksa had appointed people such as Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan, alias Pillaiyan, as Advisors who are unable to make a worthwhile contribution. The huge cost of maintaining his army of advisors had to ultimately be borne by the poor, Karunathillake, observed.

He said that the UPFA government having accused the SLMC of being a racist party during the recently concluded Eastern Provincial Council Election, had now teamed up with it to form the administration in the Council, without any respect for the people’s clear verdict rejecting the UPFA by 400,000 votes to 200,000.

The Rajapaksa regime was pandering to the wishes of the IMF and World Bank which it not so long ago berated. It would come as no surprise if the prices of electricity and gas are increased further, now that polls are over. This would be a huge blow to the poor masses, who only last week, were told to pay 20 percent more for water, the MP noted.