Venkataraman Krishnamurthy, who died in Chennai aged 97, was among the last of the great public-sector managers who can credibly claim to have built India’s industrial backbone. In the 1970s and 1980s, he successively headed Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd (BHEL), the Maruti project, and Steel Authority of India Ltd (SAIL). He also served in the Planning Commission, at the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, and the National Manufacturing Council. At BHEL, he oversaw the large-scale merger of multiple public sector entities flawlessly, something that public sector undertakings (PSUs) have struggled with subsequently. Krishnamurthy would not necessarily have described himself as a technocrat; he thought of himself as an engineer, a manager, but most of all as a “professional”. His passing thus is a moment for national reflection on how and why India’s public sector — although it remains a vital component of the national economy — is no longer the preserve of excellence, innovation, and, indeed, professionalism.
Part of the reason for this surely is that the broader pool of human resources available to the public sector in India has shifted. In the 1970s, a public-sector job was not just comparable to the private sector in terms of personal rewards, but provided a greater chance of being at the cutting edge of innovation and sectoral growth. When BHEL was formed, no other concern in India was likely to be able to master the technical processes and products that it chose. Krishnamurthy successfully persuaded not just Indian engineers but also foreign investors that PSUs were the location where growth and innovation could occur, as witnessed in his ability to bring and keep Suzuki on board in the small-car project. Unlike subsequent PSU executives, Krishnamurthy did not see his job as being the minion of some line ministry. In fact, he had to leave as secretary, heavy industry, after a disagreement with the then Union industries minister — but was swiftly reassigned to the Maruti project by Indira Gandhi’s office.