Business Standard

Unions willing to sign banks’ turnaround pact, with riders

- NAMRATA ACHARYA

Bank unions agreed to sign a turnaround pact in Kolkata on Friday, provided the lenders discussed the blueprint with them.

In a big relief to banks, the unions of 10 banks are also expected to agree on curtailmen­t of perks, subject to conditions.

"We have decided that we will have no objection in signing the memorandum of understand­ing (MoU), provided the turnaround plan is discussed with us before implementa­tion," Rajen Nagar, president, All India Bank Employees Associatio­n, told Business Standard.

On Thursday, the banks had sent MoU copies to unions stating "management, employee union, and officers' associatio­n commit by this MoU that they take the responsibi­lity of successful implementa­tion of the turnaround plan."

The turnaround plan for banks is being formulated by SBI Caps.

"We will have to decide what kind of cut in perks banks are talking about. If they ask for 50 per cent cut, that is obviously not acceptable to us," said Nagar.

The unions will also seek more transparen­cy on restructur­ed assets and ask for making public the name of big defaulters.

Recently, the Centre had sent letters to 10 banks, asking them to lay out a revival road map for availing government funds. The letter also said that some staff benefits could be restructur­ed on a temporary basis.

Some banks with high non-performing loans (NPLs) might require more stringent austerity measures than others. For example, at the end of December quarter, Kolkata-based UCO Bank’s NPLs were 17.18 per cent of total loans made.

"Any MoU will be implemente­d with full support of employees," Ravi Krishan Takkar, managing director and chief executive of UCO Bank, had earlier told Business Standard.

While UCO Bank already received close to ~775 crore from government, it is yet to receive another ~1,150 crore. The bank had posted a net loss of about ~437 crore for the quarter ended December.

Pawan Kumar Bajaj, managing director and chief executive of United Bank of India, refused to comment on the MoU issue. The bank has already taken a few austerity steps, like curtailmen­t of electricit­y costs, and is considerin­g reducing branches.

The bank had posted a net profit of about ~64 crore for the December quarter.

 ?? REUTERS ?? At the end of December quarter, Kolkata-based UCO Bank’s NPLs were 17.18 per cent of the total loans made.
REUTERS At the end of December quarter, Kolkata-based UCO Bank’s NPLs were 17.18 per cent of the total loans made.

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