Pingu
Credo
Coffee, Chalky, Chocolate Drop, the Indian.
Oh I don't know - there's just an air to this thread I don't like but what do I know about management.
That's tuppence.
mans got a point.
Coffee, Chalky, Chocolate Drop, the Indian.
Oh I don't know - there's just an air to this thread I don't like but what do I know about management.
That's tuppence.
No, I know what you mean. I don't think anyone here means that but it would be easy for somebody to surf along here, see the thread and say "yeah those Indians eh, they have a problem with women".Coffee, Chalky, Chocolate Drop, the Indian.
Oh I don't know - there's just an air to this thread I don't like but what do I know about management.
That's tuppence.
Plus scratching the surface of the labour power and profit relationship can seem dehumanising.No, I know what you mean. I don't think anyone here means that but it would be easy for somebody to surf along here, see the thread and say "yeah those Indians eh, they have a problem with women".
He's not an employer, he's a manager. And there is nothing he's said that identifies, even vaguely, who it is and where etc. he's been v careful.
Examining it whilst trying to justify it can definitely be dehumanising.Plus scratching the surface of the labour power and profit relationship can seem dehumanising.
And yet, India has been in the news recently after a vicious rape and the resulting protests.No, I know what you mean. I don't think anyone here means that but it would be easy for somebody to surf along here, see the thread and say "yeah those Indians eh, they have a problem with women".
yes a tragic case of cultural vandalism. really puts whats happened in timbuktu into perspectiveAlthough Fridgemagnet did delete a load of my ... posts by "accident".
No, I said sort him out. I never mentioned sacking Don't projecting your shite on me young man!!
He's not only publicly said that he doesn't think women should be in charge of men but he's also ignored a client's instructions because the representative was a woman? That's pretty fucking terrible. I can't imagine even the most old-school misogynist company liking that.
I'd say that I can't imagine people behaving like that these days but unfortunately I can.
Meanwhile, we've had Jimmy Savile hot on the heels of Rochdale and Worboys. What the fuck are you trying to "just say"?And yet, India has been in the news recently after a vicious rape and the resulting protests.
Just saying.
And increasingly common here thanks to the EU Posted Workers' Directive. You're talking about the extremely privileged end of the employment market. By definition, the exception rather than the norm.The team in the UK are living on the same income while he is in the UK- that's the point. The expat piece isn't all about maximising profit or you would move people from low cost countries, pay them next to nothing and probably put them up in dormitories. As in fact is common in china....
Think it's management speak for 'return to sender, do not pass go, etc'.What does RTU mean??
What does RTU mean??
I don't think firky was referring to your decision to name the country of origin. "The Indian guy" would have been a perfectly acceptable alternative to "the Indian" (IMO).
The cultural excuse holds no water at all. Even if he wasn't intelligent enough to have done his cultural homework, middle-class Indian feminists have been making the same arguments as middle-class European feminists and have made similar (much resented) progress in law vis-a-vis the workplace. It's the worst place in the world to be a woman according to some UN or similar report, but that's primarily for poor women who cannot afford to access education and have no real protection under the law. It's a lot closer to Europe for middle-class types, of which he is one.
Agree on this, mainly (IME) because people from certain regions dont get sent on lucrative overseas assignments because they are the best people for the job but rather they have the best contacts/pay the better bribes etc etc. It's something I've seen a few times.Massive over assumption there I'm afraid. Worked with a lot of staff flown in from all ends of the earth and the majority are 'middling'.
How do you ensure that this doesn't happen? I've heard a few cases of Indian employees having to pay a percentage of their higher overseas income to the person/s who "arranged" for them to get that position.We do ensure anyone who is seconded in this way receives the full amount they are due though so no skimming off the top of it for the Indian Company - its a contractual obligation and is clearly defined in the contract.
How do you ensure that this doesn't happen? I've heard a few cases of Indian employees having to pay a percentage of their higher overseas income to the person/s who "arranged" for them to get that position.
weltweit said:Anyhow, the problem with Mr Stupid is that he did not do what was requested or instructed by a senior person and made sexist comments to colleagues.
Thing is the CEO is unlikely to be the fixer (unless it was an extremely high level job) also there are unlikely to be any complaints especially if on the Indian side it is seen as the norm and that anyone percieved to be "rocking the boat" wouldn't get the chance of a higher paid foreign asssignment again ( and more than likely would lose their job in India too).tbh I am not sure. the group has the same CEO across all companies and this has been signed off by him. no one has ever complained that they have had money deducted. if they have done so then technically they are in breach of the contract but whether anything would be done about it is uncertain. I cant rally see the UK company suing the Indian company. I will ask the finance director about this next time I see him
I guess the underlying check is that a shitstorm would occur if we found out that one part of the group was telling porkies to another part of the group.
One way of approaching that (and it's a very very good point that Fuchs made) is to incorporate it into the Bribery Policy and procedures. It's another example of one of the reasons that the Bribery Act was enacted and there are certain regions where "arrangement fees" (backhanders, call it what you will) are a cultural norm.tbh I am not sure. the group has the same CEO across all companies and this has been signed off by him. no one has ever complained that they have had money deducted. if they have done so then technically they are in breach of the contract but whether anything would be done about it is uncertain. I cant rally see the UK company suing the Indian company. I will ask the finance director about this next time I see him
I guess the underlying check is that a shitstorm would occur if we found out that one part of the group was telling porkies to another part of the group.
Thing is the CEO is unlikely to be the fixer (unless it was an extremely high level job) also there are unlikely to be any complaints especially if on the Indian side it is seen as the norm and that anyone percieved to be "rocking the boat" wouldn't get the chance of a higher paid foreign asssignment again ( and more than likely would lose their job in India too).
Simple, India does not have a good reputation where gender equality is concerned.....
What the fuck are you trying to "just say"?
....
Can we kill him now?
(Obvs once we've acknowledged his cultural differences )
And you thought that the fact that a rape happened there recently was good enough evidence to back up your assertion with? Because rape is definitely not a problem in Europe? Doesn't happen. Not 'real' rape anyway.Simple, India does not have a good reputation where gender equality is concerned.