Business Standard

RBI needs to work with govt to take action against PSBs: Rangarajan

- SANJEEB MUKERJEE & INDIVJAL DHASMANA

C Rangarajan, former head of the country’s Reserve bank (RBI) says the regulator does have formal supervisor­y powers over government-owned lenders but also needs to work with the state in taking needed action.

He was speaking a couple of days after Reserve Bank governor Urjit Patel had said the central bank did not have adequate leeway in this regard.

“The issues have been raised at various levels. How much control the Reserve Bank has over public sector banks (PSBs) is an issue. In terms of (formal) supervisio­n, it has powers,” the former head of the prime minister’s economic advisory council told reporters on the sidelines of his lecture in the memory of the late Saumitra Chaudhuri, economist and Planning Commission member.

“So far as supervisio­n is concerned, there are enough powers but to take action on public sector banks (PSBs), consultati­on with the government is needed,” he said.

On the blame for the fraud at government-owned Punjab National Bank (PNB), the present RBI chief had said on Wednesday,” There has been a tendency in the pronouncem­ents post revelation of the fraud that RBI’s supervisio­n team should have caught it. While that can always be said ex post with any fraud, it is simply infeasible for a banking regulator to be in every nook and corner of banking activity to rule out frauds by ‘being there’.”

RBI has limited legal authority to hold state-owned bank boards accountabl­e for strategic direction, risk profiles, assessment of management and compensati­on, Patel had said.

His comments came days after Finance Minister Arun Jaitley saying the regulators ultimately decide the rules of the game and have to have a third eye, perpetuall­y to be open at the sector. “But, unfortunat­ely, in the Indian system, we politician­s are accountabl­e, the regulators are not.”

Rangarajan said RBI’s action in banning of Letters of Undertakin­g (LoUs) could be reviewed later. “I suppose that for some time it (this move) could be done to see that there is no avenue for frauds. After some time, it could be reviewed, and once the necessary precaution­s are taken, it could be re-introduced.”

On whether RBI’s new norms on banks’ non-performing assets (NPAs) would lead to companies heading for insolvency, he said,” It will mean that NPAs of the PSBs might increase but whether it will lead automatica­lly to other procedures will depend on the items that come under NPAs.”

Asked whether these norms should be reviewed, he said, “I am sure RBI is reviewing.”

As to whether there is a case anew for privatisat­ion of PSBs, he said the issue should not be discussed in the context of a fraud. “That (fraud) happens not only in public sector banks but private sector ones as well. The entire crisis of 2008 was caused by private sector banks in the West,” he emphasised..

Earlier, in the first of the Saumitra Chaudhuri memorial lecture series, Rangarajan criticised the recent government move to raise customs duty on some products, saying the step was ill-advised.

Reminded that these were within World Trade Organizati­on sanctioned limits, he said it was also the type of thing that created an argument for US President Donald Trump to say, “I will too.” Adding: “It has come at a wrong time, let me say.”

More on business-standard.com

So far as supervisio­n is concerned, there are enough powers but to take action on PSBs, consultati­on with the government is needed”

C RANGARAJAN Former RBI governor

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India