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The IndiGo fiasco must serve as a wake-up call for Indian boards
Mint Bangalore
|December 09, 2025
They must monitor risks and resilience—especially if a breakdown could have severe consequences
The airline's breakdown in communication with passengers during its worst phases of flight disruption also suggests an absence of oversight. Airline systems displayed operational status that diverged from airport data. Information integrity in this modern age of over-communication has become vital, a hygiene factor. Boards that treat it as a branding detail miss its economic and reputational consequences.
Large corporations are not governed for profitable quarters alone, but for business continuity. And when a company that carries a majority share of national air traffic suffers a system-wide breakdown, questions must be asked beyond operational factors. In particular, of board accountability.
True, boards do not run a business’s daily operations. But, in the case of IndiGo, the board’s role mustn’t escape scrutiny. New safety regulations had been notified well in advance. Staffing implications were evident. Software changes were scheduled events.
Seasonal congestion was predictable. These were not random events that collided, but known pressures that converged. Boards exist to examine precisely this kind of convergence risk. Their mandate goes beyond reviewing earnings or expansion plans. It includes testing whether the firm's management has built operational depth, surplus capacity and crisis-readiness.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 09, 2025-Ausgabe von Mint Bangalore.
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