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Old Boys Network in Nepal

   What follows is taken from last week's T 23-Sep-03 ashu
     Here's why the grey beards rule: Old 23-Sep-03 czar
       <br> Neeta said >>>>The head office of 27-Sep-03 Bhunte
         Bhunte wrote: " Katai [Neeta] ko sasu 27-Sep-03 ashu
           Ashu, Oh! then she may want to visit 27-Sep-03 Bhunte


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ashu Posted on 23-Sep-03 05:36 PM

What follows is taken from last week's The Nepali Times.

Enjoy,

oohi
ashu
ktm,nepal

**************
Old boys network
Our ageist society just doesnt get it: years do not add up to expertise.

By Neeta Pokhrel

In the West, governments are grappling with the enormous socio-economic impact of an ageing population. Society is battling the need to get the elderly back into the workforce so they can be productive in retirement.

However, it is with pride and amazement, that I observe this isnt the case in Nepal. Here, elderly peopleelderly men to be more precisestill form the majority of the workforce, the political establishment and the bureaucracy. Defying all international norms, they are at the forefront of our society, calling all of the shots because of the traditional veneration for older people here. It is the young who have no clout and connection in Nepal.

Now, how did we manage to get to this point? It is a grand design cunningly plotted and practiced over centuries by grey-haired conspirators from all sections of society. From Baluwatar to Singha Darbar, to corporations and consulting firms, the elderly hold court. The head office of this vast old boys club is the planning commission which discreetly pumps millions of rupees every year into crafting and strengthening the ring fence that no one less-than-50 can break into.

International do-gooders, the INGOs and multilaterals, arent lagging behind in promoting this cronyism of the elderly either. Recently, one of them signed a team of consultants for a project, it had an average age of 57. Thanks to strategically developed and refined specifications, no one with less than a zillion years experience can get in.

A young adviser in Nepal is an oxymoron, we are told. You might as well buy a grey wig and a stomach pillow to be taken seriously. Our ageist society just doesnt get it: years do not add up to expertise. Older is not necessarily wiser. The age-old exhortation to listen to your elders is taken too literally here.

Look at the policy development settings, places where rules are made and grand designs plotted, like a national-level brainstorming workshop that I recently attended on an important public commodity. The decent sized hall was packed to the rafters with grizzled men in the autumn of their lives. Did I overlook the age-criteria on the invitation letter? Are these the representatives of a predominantly young nation in which a majority is below 40? On my way out, I bumped into the delighted organisers, happy at the froth that they churned out.

Where is the young crowd? There is no sign of the 30-something professionals in Nepal. Maybe they are all out in the hinterland fighting each other, or perhaps young Nepalis are all in the Gulf and Malaysia toiling to send money home. Or is it that in Nepal mid-life crisis sets in much earlier because our average life expectancy is 55 and they are all moping at home ? In any case, one must admire those superior minds in whose hands we have bestowed the destiny of our country.

Now heres a business proposal to our planning commission and the rest of the gang heads: instead of twiddling their thumbs with nothing to plan in a country that has turned into a battlefield, they could all set up consultancies to advise Western countries on how to make more productive use of their ageing populations.
czar Posted on 23-Sep-03 06:10 PM

Here's why the grey beards rule:

Old age and treachery will overcome youth and skill.
Bhunte Posted on 27-Sep-03 05:41 AM


Neeta said >>>>The head office of this vast old boys club is the planning commission which discreetly pumps millions of rupees every year into crafting and strengthening the ring fence that no one less-than-50 can break into. <<<<<

I agree with Neeta in many but on the above. Most people i know in NPC are in the range of 40-50. The above assertion is too blunt. However, most old "tattus" who are grossely inefficient and too beurocratic while in govt, often take advisorship in foreign aided projects, working as consultants, etc. Let's not blame only to govt people.

Further, why Neeta ji is tight lipped about overwhelmingly dominance of old 'tattus' in major political parties? Katai ooha ko sasur jyu tyo gray head club ma hunu hunchha ki? Asu jyu, pls ask her why she didnt bring up that issue in that article, and only bugged to NPC.
ashu Posted on 27-Sep-03 09:42 AM

Bhunte wrote:

" Katai [Neeta] ko sasur jyu tyo gray head club ma hunu hunchha ki?"


Bhunte,

The occasional humorist Neeta, and that's her real name, does NOT have a sasura as
of today.

oohi
ashu
ktm,nepal
Bhunte Posted on 27-Sep-03 05:29 PM

Ashu,

Oh! then she may want to visit Sajha's smartie thread. Mention her what critiques are saying about her in Sajha...eheheh