Tuesday 21 February 2012

Work-family balance: one front where Manmohan Singh has it easier than Barack Obama



Jodi Kantor's new book The Obamas reports that "Barack refuses to miss dinner with his family more than twice a week". Apparently, this is not good. Obama's family-centric approach "left him, when the going got tough, short of friends, short of people who owed him, short of people who felt that the White House was interested in them". Effective presidents are meant to be out and about, schmoozing with potential allies.

Powerful men across the political spectrum face the same trade-off - between family time and schmoozing - on this side of the pond. David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Ed Miliband are all in what the Economist calls their "Gruffolo years", the time when dads read stories to their children. By most accounts, all three party leaders make time for their families. 

I clearly sympathize with Obama's and Cameron's choice (I'm writing this after having read out The Blackberry Mouse to my daughters). I want to believe that work can and should be organized so it can be done within defined working hours. But the truth is, there is a trade-off. I inhabit a less exalted world than the Obamas' and the Camerons', but even in my little world, schmoozing is clearly useful, but it is a potentially infinite drain on time and energy.

How much easier it must be for Manmohan Singh. He didn't have to face these hard trade-offs between bedtime stories and professional schmoozing when he became Prime Minister of India, aged 72.  Maybe working into what used to be the "retirement years" isn't all bad.






  

2 comments:

Aysh said...

I agree with you.
I think family comes first always, but some jobs require more pressing things to be attended to first unfortunately, but to be honest these political leaders should know what they're getting themselves into and what their jobs require from them!

Prithvi Chandrasekhar said...

Good point, Ayesha.

The politicians knew that they were getting into very demanding jobs while they had young children at home. They aren't making sacrifices for the sake of their office, like say soldiers do.