Title: Income Tax Department
1Income Tax Department
- Human Resource
- Management
2Human Resource Management
- Big and growing Department
- With more than 59000 employees
- Serving 30 million taxpayers
- Functioning from 746 buildings located in 530
stations - Ever changing, complex work environment
- Rapid increase in per capita workload
- Constant need to upgrade skills to match job
requirements
3Human Resource Management Need for HRM Policy
for I.T.Dept
- Due to Global tax competition induction of
modern technology, need has arisen to -
- Anticipate the changing organizational needs and
manpower requirements to strategically plan for
optimum efficiency - Place right persons in the right places at the
right time and in right number for maximum
utility - Build competencies, Generate high motivation
levels and create right kind of organizational
culture -
- Therefore the need for integrated HRM policy
implemented by a dedicated set up
4Why large sized organisations with multiple
locations need HRM set up ?
- Because such HRM set up will perform most
essential functions which include - Strategic Human Resource Planning
- Make 5-10 yearly projections for HR requirements
- Assess job requirements requisite skills for
various posts - Identify specialist posts and also identify as
well as develop experts to man them - Develop strategies for capacity building through
training - Design and implement effective performance
evaluation mechanism and incentive schemes
5Why large sized organisations with multiple
locations need HRM set up ?
- Create, update and maintain comprehensive
database of manpower - Develop and implement integrated HRM policies
including recruitment, training,promotion,
transfer and succession planning - Design policy for systematic career progression,
attrition management, equal opportunity, gender
equity, diversity management - Take steps for employee welfare including
counseling - Identify key posts for succession planning
groom successors in advance
6Present factual position in the Income Tax Deptt
- The subject of Human resource planning and
development has not been allocated to any
section/wing or Directorate of the Board - Mostly administrative work and issues relating to
pay, recruitment, promotions, leave matters, HRA,
advances, transfers etc are handled by various
section under JS (Admn) - No serious attempt made to formulate
comprehensive and integrated HRM Policy for
strategic utilization of manpower - Functions assigned to various sections could not
be properly handled due to absence of policy
guidelines, shortage of staff or lack of
requisite knowledge skill
7Consequences of not having any HRM policy or
Directorate
- Large scale vacancies at crucial levels on
account of failure to plan and project future
manpower requirements, adversely affecting
performance levels - Total Sanctioned strength 59014 working
strength lt 50000 - Sanctioned strength of IRS officers 3904
working strength 2822. Shortages are - Cadre Sanctioned Strength Working Strength
Shortage - CIT 698 662 36
- Addl./Jt. 1116 716 400
- DC/AC 1974 1346 628
8Consequences of not having any HRM policy or
Directorate
- Posts with high workload at Group A stations
remained vacant and ACs in C stations remained
under worked in the absence of any set up to
assess the stationwise/postwise workload and
then redeploy manpower - No attempt made to work out the implications of
the S.C. judgment that deployment of direct
recruit IRS officers and promoted ACs should be
in the ratio of 5050- leading to even larger
number of vacancies - Alarming number of vacancies but small batches
recruited by UPSC aggravating problem
9Consequences of not having any HRM policy or
Directorate
- The Recruitment Rules and Examination Rules of
posts created / redesignated after restructuring
in 2001 have not been notified till date - The recruitment rules of the IRS have not been
amended to give effect to the 5 years old Supreme
Court judgment, which permitted officers who
have joined the service to re-appear in the Civil
Services Examination, whereas such rules have
already been amended for IA AS and IFS - Large No.of posts in the cadre of CCs, CsIT,
JCs remain vacant at any given time, as DPCs are
generally never held in time
10Consequences of not having any HRM policy or
Directorate
- The average tenure of an IRS officer against a
post is less than one year This has an adverse
impact on the efficiency of the dept. - Posts requiring specialized knowledge and skills
have not been identified and no attempt has been
made to match the skills of the officers with the
requirements of the posts - No attempt has been made to integrate the
transfer and placement policy with the overall
Human Resource Management and Development policy
to synchronize individual needs with the
organizational objectives
11Consequences of not having any HRM policy or
Directorate
- No concrete plan devised for capacity building of
officers to enable them to handle the challenges
posed by global tax competition - Since 2002 almost all management and foreign
training programme for the IRS officers have been
discontinued. Even individual initiatives
discouraged by not granting study leave - On the otherhand,attending training programmes
at IIMs and at foreign institutes of excellence
like Duke, Harvard, Syracuse made mandatory for
IAS officers and their pay rules suitably amended
12Consequences of not having any HRM policy or
Directorate
- The urgent need to have an elaborate Performance
Appraisal system and replace the existing ACRs
with Performance Appraisal Reports covering all
aspects of personality and performance in detail
could not be implemented in I T Deptt , - Whereas new and detailed PARs for different
levels of IAS as well as of IPS officers has
already been prepared notified and put on the
website of DOPT - No mechanism put in place for counseling and
other employee welfare schemes for the Income tax
dept.
13Consequences of not having any HRM policy or
Directorate
During last 11 year the workload per officer has
increased by more than 400 and disposal almost
by 400, whereas the number of supporting staff
members got reduced by 50
14Should we not find answers for these questions ?
- Are not they vital for enhancing the efficiency
of the organization ? - Are not such failures leading to large-scale
demotivation/ attrition ? - Will not such continuous failures impair the
quality of taxpayer services and adversely affect
the image of the department ? - Are not these failures leading to a situation
when the ill-provided manpower will crumble,
unable to cope with the increased workload ?
15Should we not find answers for these questions ?
- Dont we need a set up which would assess the
manpower and financial requirements to cope with
expansion in future workload ? - Dont we need a set up which would prepare the
plans for the recruitment, promotion, placement,
and capacity building of our manpower so that our
revenue collections do not decline and we are not
left behind in the era of global tax competition
? - Are not these functions essential for
maintaining the credibility of an organization ?
16The answer is- formulating HRM policy creating
Human Resource Directorate
- Cabinet has already approved in August 2000,
creation of Directorate of Human Resource
Management, but not notified till date. - Sanctioned posts notified vide F.No.
A-11013/3/98-Ad VII dated 30th March, 2001 for CC
Delhi include manpower for this Directorate - CIT 1 ADDl/Jt. DIT -3 DCIT - 3 ITOs
2 PS - 1 AO - 1 Inspector - 5 OS - 2 Stenos
4 TAs - 5 Peons5 - The only action, which needs to be taken by the
Department of Revenue, Ministry of Finance, is to
issue the notification for creating such
Directorate - Soon after notification, officers with MBA
background having sufficient experience in
personnel management may be posted immediately
17HR Directorate to implement integrated HRM
Policies
- Simultaneously, a team to be constituted to
formulate the integrated HRM Development policy
taking into account manpower needs, recruitment
and training policies, placement and transfer
policies, promotion and succession plans,
capacity building and career development,
performance evaluation etc. - The functions of this Directorate would not
overlap with the functions of Ad VI, and Ad VII
working under JS (Admn) - The authority vested in this Directorate would
not take away any of the powers at present being
exercised by Ad VI, Ad VII, Ad VIII and Ad IX and
these sections will continue to assist the Board
in accordance with the prescribed policy
guidelines - This is essential for the optimum utilization of
our manpower and in the best interests of our
country