Business Standard

Utter inefficien­cy

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In “No systemic accountabi­lity” (February 17) T N Ninan makes an interest observatio­n that public sector banks “don’t seem to know how to lend money and to whom”. Consider the facts: the Punjab National Bank scandal was discovered not by the bank’s audit or any other team but by the “indiscreti­on” of a staff member of Nirav Modi as reported in “How staff brought Nirav Modi down” (February 17). The deception game costing ~114 billion went on unabated for about seven years under the United Progressiv­e Alliance and National Democratic Alliance regimes. If the fraud was the handiwork of a few lower level employees of the organisati­on, it reflects utter inefficien­cy as well as unawarenes­s and complicity of the bank’s top management. In any such case, the axe should fall on the functional­ly involved board members of the bank, including its chairman and CEO. How come the scam continued for years under the rule of a Prime Minister who vowed “na khaoonga na khane doonga”? The case may not be different for Nirav Modi, just like how it was for Vijay Mallya, who managed to flee to the UK and has since then been avoiding arrest.

It is remarkable that despite losing Rs 2.65 trillion in a decade no head of institutio­n has lost his job, leave alone face prosecutio­n. Is it because the culture of nurturing nonperform­ing assets and scandalous deals in PSUs benefit the political bigwigs irrespecti­ve of the party to which they belong? Or is this sheer ignorance of bank officials? Or mere inefficien­cy? Y G Chouksey Pune

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