Odyssey of a Civil Servant:
From Arrack Bottling to North Block to Mint Street
It is
well-known that an IAS officer loves his own voice, often tells ancient stories
in which he was the hero, and his actions as Collector in a certain district
were so exemplary that people there still remember him with love, respect, and
awe. However, as soon as he begins with ‘When I was Collector ….,’ the audience
mentally switches off, while pretending to listen and nodding politely from
time to time.
Why are
autobiographies of IAS officers generally unreadable? They are so full of
themselves, each convinced that he is the sun around which planets big or small
revolve, for that’s the divinely ordained arrangement to maintain order! Most
often, they are out of touch with reality. Further, after more than three
decades of work in government offices, they have lost the ability to write
simple, comprehensible prose. Why don’t they hire professional writers to do
the job? Surely, they can afford to pay for that.
Duvvuri
Subbarao, during his session at the Bhopal Literature Festival 2025, spoke
about his book Just A Mercenary? What a pity, hardly any serving IAS officer
attended the session even though it was a Sunday. His brief talk about his life
and career was interesting, so I bought a Kindle copy for 359.31, finished it
soon, and enjoyed reading it.
This is not
a book review, so I jump straight to Chapter 6 – Make Haste Slowly: My
relatively short tenure as a District Collector – from which I quote:
‘That I did
not have a stable tenure as a district collector is, therefore, one of the
disappointments of my IAS career.’
Mr. Subbarao
was the topper of his batch (1972), and had a stellar career with several
challenging yet deeply satisfying assignments. He worked in the World Bank for
five years, resigned from the IAS a year before his retirement, and was RBI
Governor from 2008–2013.
Why, then,
is Mr. Subbarao ‘disappointed’ about his brief tenure as Collector? Because
people, including IAS officers themselves, still believe that Collectorship is
the defining assignment in the career of an IAS officer. The myth persists even
after much erosion in the authority and aura of Collector.
So, how long
was Mr. Subbarao’s tenure as Collector? ‘Twenty-one months but spread over
three districts,’ he writes. Longest tenure was of ten months!
Even though
this blogger was Collector in three districts for four years and eight months —
a fair tenure, surely — he nursed a grievance that early in his career he had
been transferred from a district in just nineteen days. Must be a record for
the shortest tenure as Collector in MP, and maybe in the country, too, he often
thought; till he read Mr. Subbarao’s book.
Mr.
Subbarao, upon being posted as Collector, Krishna, enthusiastically took an
early morning train from Hyderabad to Vijayawada where he was received by a
lone deputy tahsildar who informed him that, as per a message received from the
State Government, the posting was ‘on hold’ and that he was to return to
Hyderabad. Thoughtfully, the deputy tahsildar had already bought a return
ticket for the officer who was not his Collector.
This blogger
mistakenly thought that he held the record for the shortest tenure as District
Collector in the country!
Vignettes from Just A Mercenary?
- His UPSC interview had a
disastrous start for he knew little about Muharram.
- Embarrassed to mention it to
colleagues and relatives when posted as OSD (Officer on Special Duty) to
set up arrack-bottling plants in each district.
- N. T. Rama Rao, the CM, always
used the royal ‘We’! His meetings began at 4.30 am!
- ‘RBI takes cheap money from the
government, banks and the public (yes, the currency we hold in our wallets
is an interest-free loan to the RBI) and invests it in interest-bearing
foreign and rupee assets.’
- Last chapter Letter to my
Mother is touching.
- Just a mercenary? Or, was I
more? ‘The judgement will perhaps remain reserved for ever.’
Note: Serving IAS officers, especially
young officers, may like to read this book. By the way, my spouse finished the
book before I did, undeterred by the references to implementation of LTR (Land
Transfer Regulation) in ‘agency areas,’ preparation of government budgets,
management of public finance, and RBI’s struggle to balance inflation and
growth.
Further Notes
Encyclopaedia
Britannica on autobiography
‘Formal
autobiographies offer a special kind of biographical truth: a life, reshaped by
recollection, with all of recollection’s conscious and unconscious omissions
and distortions.’ The novelist Graham Greene said that, for this reason, an
autobiography is only “a sort of life” and used the phrase as the title for his
own autobiography (1971).
Quotes
‘Every
autobiography is concerned with two characters, a Don Quixote, the Ego, and a
Sancho Panza, the Self.’
— W. H. Auden
“The urge to
write one's autobiography, so I have been told, overtakes everyone sooner or
later.”
— Agatha Christie
— Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
"A delightful and insightful post! Your observations on the IAS culture and the myth surrounding the Collector's post are spot on. The anecdotes from Duvvuri Subbarao's book 'Just A Mercenary?' add a nice touch to the post. Your own experience as Collector brings a personal perspective to the write-up. Well-written and engaging!"
ReplyDeleteDada must say you reflected better a literature student. Wish to read more of your experience having seen Subbarao at RBI
ReplyDeleteExcellent insights. I am now tempted to buy the book & read it.
ReplyDelete