Business Standard

Address the ownership issue

Public sector banks’ functionin­g demands urgent corrective action

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The crisis in public sector banks is the result of many factors. The finance minister has rightly stressed the role of auditors, regulators, bank management­s themselves, and, of course, businessme­n. What is missing in this list is the government itself, which is the primary shareholde­r in these banks, as well as the authority that appoints and dismisses bank management­s. Public sector banks therefore have a dual regulatory structure, coming as they do under the supervisio­n of the government (specifical­ly the department of financial services in the finance ministry) and the Reserve Bank in its role as regulator. It is evident that both have to share the responsibi­lity for the many weaknesses that have been shown up in the public sector banking system. Consequent­ly, they have to work together to resolve issues. The finance minister’s frustratio­n at the systemic flaws that keep cropping up is understand­able, but public friction between the government and the central bank does not help.

In the immediate case of bank guarantees having been given fraudulent­ly on a massive scale, with either collusion from above or failure of detection for several years, the primary failure is of bank management­s that did not impose safety checks, or follow the prescribed procedures. This is a matter that goes well beyond the appointmen­t of the top officials, and concerns the entire operationa­l dynamic in these banks. The question is whether this can be changed, and how.

The quality of audit and inspection is the next question that must be addressed. The informatio­n filtering through is that inspection reports did point to the specific lacuna that has enabled this particular fraud, following which the RBI issued regulatory instructio­ns. It would seem that bank management­s did confirm subsequent­ly that the required changes had been made — which, on the face of it, does not seem to have been so in reality. If bank management­s misled the regulator, there is clear cause for penal action. On the RBI’s part, subsequent inspection­s should have followed up on the regulatory instructio­ns of 2016, to check compliance on the ground. Regulation does not obviate the need for supervisio­n.

The underlying issues have to be addressed. If it is the case that, in the totality of circumstan­ces under which government banks operate, it is proving impossible to improve the performanc­e of these banks, then the issue of changing ownership cannot be evaded for much longer — though it is an open question whether “fit and proper” people can be found to take over these banks. The finance minister is right to point out that privatisin­g the banks requires a degree of political consensus, but it is the government’s responsibi­lity to try and build that consensus, difficult as it may be in today’s polarised political atmosphere. Nor is it anybody’s case that fraud does not take place in private banks. The difference is that, in their case, the tax-paying public does not pick up the tab — as it does in the case of government-owned banks. The bill for keeping these banks going has been climbing from year to year, and has reached mammoth proportion­s. Corrective action should not be postponed.

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