New Delhi, Dec. 15 -- Last fortnight, I was in Bengaluru, where, along with hundreds of other passengers, we saw IndiGo shuffle flight schedules like a pack of cards. Travellers across the country faced delays of up to 12 hours. The airline, controlling above 60% of India's aviation market, had collapsed.
What unfolded was not just an airline management crisis-subsequent developments suggested that the company had strategically deployed industrial action against an air-safety regulation.
The incident points to a deeper malaise of what might be called passive governance: a state that waits for problems to manifest rather than anticipating and preventing them.
What is passive governance? It is not a lack of governance; it is a style of g...
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