Need to clean up bad debts in banks within a year: Rajan

Favours channelising household savings into financial system

January 03, 2015 10:11 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 05:37 pm IST - PUNE:

RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan. File photo

RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan. File photo

Reserve Bank of India Governor Raghuram Rajan, on Saturday, made a strong case for cleaning up bad debts of banks and restructure other possible non-performing assets (NPAs) within a year to put the economy back on track.

He also favoured channelising ‘full savings’ of the households into the financial system so that the requisite resources for growth were made available.

“In the short-term (up to 12 months), there is need to clean up the NPAs and then restructure other stressed loans so as to put the economy back on the track,” Dr. Rajan said at the two-day Gyan Sangam here.

Total gross NPAs of public sector banks stood at over Rs.2.43 lakh crore as on September 30, 2014. The top 30 NPAs accounted for Rs.87,368 crore or 35.9 per cent of total gross NPAs of PSBs.

Dr. Rajan said the bona fide mistakes made by the bankers while taking commercial decisions should be protected by the government.

“If the officers are hauled up for such decisions, this would to lead to delay in good decisions because of avoidance of risk,” he said.

The Governor also stated that there was a need for internationalisation of the banking system in the current global environment.

“The capital base of the banks may need to be enhanced,” Dr. Rajan said while emphasising on the need for consolidation in ownership, improvement in governance, and enhancement of management capability.

With the licensing of the small banks and the payments banks, there would be new players in the industry and competition among the PSBs will also grow to meet these challenges.

“Accordingly, PSBs have to develop differentiated products,” Dr. Rajan said.

Stressing on the need for PSBs to recruit young talent, train, and retain them, Dr. Rajan said: “And that the government needs to have a re-look at the campus recruitment, which at present is banned because of Supreme Court ruling.”

Finance Secretary Rajiv Mehrishi raised the question whether bank nationalisation had been able to achieve the objectives of reaching out to all people and expansion of credit as necessary.

He urged that banks needed to be healthy to drive 7-8 per cent growth in GDP.

Additionally, to provide that magnitude of financing, the PSBs needed to enhance their capital base. He further said the government might take a re-look at the legal system to deal with wilful defaulters.

In his address, Chief Economic Advisor Arvind Subramanian suggested ways by which the banking system could generate and efficiently allocate domestic savings to sustain the investment rate of 35 per cent of GDP to achieve the growth of 8 per cent in the medium-term.

He proposed that the PSBs should be differentiated into weak, good and strong categories, and, accordingly, consolidation and restructuring measures could be applied to them.

“There should be diversification both within and outside the banking system. There should be better bankruptcy procedures. The current overhang of stressed assets should be resolved by distribution of the pain between promoters, creditors and tax payers,” Dr. Subramanian said.

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