Banking Regulation Bill gets Rajya Sabha nod

It empowers the Reserve Bank of India to issue instructions to the banks to act against major defaulters

August 10, 2017 10:19 pm | Updated 10:19 pm IST - NEW DELHI

New Delhi: Finance Minister Arun Jaitley speaks in the Rajya Sabha in New Delhi on Thursday. PTI Photo / TV GRAB   (PTI8_10_2017_000136B)

New Delhi: Finance Minister Arun Jaitley speaks in the Rajya Sabha in New Delhi on Thursday. PTI Photo / TV GRAB (PTI8_10_2017_000136B)

The Rajya Sabha on Thursday passed the Banking Regulation (Amendment) Bill, which empowers the Reserve Bank of India to issue instructions to the banks to act against major defaulters.

The Bill, earlier passed by the Lok Sabha, will replace the Banking Regulation (Amendment) Ordinance, 2017.

Replying to a debate on the Bill, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said there was nothing wrong in banks giving out loans and trying to recover them. It was only on the strength of the banking finance that businesses expanded, jobs were created and the economy moved on.

Responding to demands for making the names of big defaulters public, Mr. Jaitley said it was being done in the case of wilful defaulters. Only in cases of normal commercial transactions were the names not made public. Asked about the Panama cases, he said action had been taken pertaining to all foreign account details that had come.

On the concerns raised by Congress member Jairam Ramesh about rising non-performing assets (NPA), Mr. Jaitley said they stood at ₹6.41 lakh crore by March this year. They were growing because of accumulated interests. Along with the stressed assets, they amounted to over ₹8 lakh crore.

Some members wondered why the government was extending such powers to the RBI, to which the Finance Minister said the RBI was not merely a regulator. It also performed other functions like public debt management.

Mr. Jaitley said after the insolvency law, which provides for a window of 180 days for debtors to settle the matter or face eviction and subsequent takeover of management by debt reconstruction companies, things had started improving. Debtors were now coming forward to settle unresolved issues with lenders.

Earlier, in his opening remarks, the Finance Minister identified Steel, Infrastructure, Power and Textiles as the sectors with the most NPAs. Public sector banks were hit the most as big industrial and infrastructure programmes were supported by them in the hope that there would be further expansion.

Due to the import of steel from China, domestic businesses had suffered. However, things were now looking up with the government introducing customs duty and minimum import price. The road sector had also started showing good results.

Mr. Jaitley said the earlier rules for debt recovery were time-consuming. The new parallel mechanism was more effective.

What was the urgency to pass the Bill, he was asked. “It is already too late,” Mr. Jaitley responded. “The capacity to banks to lend money to small creditors is being impacted, the growth is impacted.” With the new measures, banks would start realising their money. “Assets will not be wasted. The companies will continue to function and the jobs that are there in the company will also be saved,” he said.

Among those who participated in the debate were Samajwadi Party leader Naresh Agrawal, AIADMK’s N. Gokulakrishnan, TMC member S.S. Roy, JD (U)’s Harivansh, CPI(M)’s Tapan Kumar Sen, BSP’s Veer Singh and BJD’s Sarojini Hembram.

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