Business Standard

Strengthen­ing banks the next big reform: Jaitley

- ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY

After demonetisa­tion, the bankruptcy code and the goods and service tax, the next big economic change the government aims to do is strengthen­ing state-owned banks and cleaning their account books, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said on Thursday.

He also said the Centre was confident of disinvestm­ent proceeds comfortabl­y overshooti­ng the Budgeted Estimate.

“Fixing the banks and competing the unfinished task of strengthen­ing the PSBs (public sector banks) is unquestion­ably one of the most important agenda (items) on the table. We have already announced the detailed recapitali­sation plans, the idea being to ensure the ability of banks to support growth,” Jaitley said.

He was speaking at the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry’s annual general meeting here.

“We want the micro, small and medium enterprise­s sector to strengthen. This sector has been at the receiving end in the past few years, particular­ly with lending capacity of banks being depleted as a result of NPAs (non-performing assets). The lending capacity of banks will improve as capital adequacy improves,” the minister said.

The Centre is to issue the first tranche of ~1.35 lakh crore worth of bank recapitali­sation bonds very soon. This tranche might consist of bonds having a 10-year tenure and an interest rate comparable to existing government securities, of around seven per cent.

These bonds, part of the two-year ~2.11 lakh crore recapitali­sation programme, will be front-loaded over the next three to four quarters. Apart from the recap bonds, the Centre will cough up a total of ~18,000 crore this year and the next. The other ~58,000 crore the banks are to mobilise from the market.

The banks’ books are also cleaned with NPAs being taken to the National Company Law Tribunal under the insolvency and bankruptcy code.

“It is going to be the first year in history where we are going to significan­tly overtake the disinvestm­ent target itself. In India, privatisat­ion and disinvestm­ent is the art of the possible,” Jaitley said.

The second such occasion of overshoot, in fact. In 2009-10, when the proceeds were ~25,000 crore, the Budgeted Estimate was ~1,120 crore. The total divestment target for 2017-18 is ~72,500 crore, the highest ever. The proceeds so far are ~52,500 crore, exceeding 2016-17’s Revised Estimate of ~45,500 crore.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ??
PHOTO: PTI

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