Business Standard

Financial liabilitie­s of households at 7-yr high

RBI ANNUAL REPORT: Earlier, there was a consistent reduction from 3.2% in FY12 to 2.4% of GNDI in FY17

- ABHISHEK WAGHMARE

The financial liabilitie­s of households have gone up to at least a seven-year high of 4 per cent of their disposable income, according to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Annual Report for 2017-18 (FY18). This is significan­t, as it comes after a consistent reduction from 3.2 per cent of the gross national disposable income (GNDI) in 2011-12 to 2.4 per cent of GNDI in 2016-17 (FY17). While the reason for its fall to 2.4 per cent of GNDI in FY17 was demonetisa­tion, the growing demand for housing and unsecured personal loans led to a rise in liabilitie­s in FY18, experts said.

This is also evident from the fact that the share of personal loans in the outstandin­g non-food credit rose from 19.4 per cent at the end of March 2015 to 24.8 per cent at the end of March 2018, according to the RBI’s monthly credit deployment data. It stood at 25.3 per cent in June 2018.

From March 2015 to March 2018, the outstandin­g non-food credit grew by 28 per cent. In the same period, personal loans outstandin­g grew by 63 per cent, from ~11.7 trillion to ~19 trillion. In that, housing loans outstandin­g grew 55 per cent, from ~6.3 trillion to ~9.8 trillion, clearly growing faster than the growth in overall credit outstandin­g.

Personal loans have replaced a part of the share of industry credit, which is tapering for the last four years, while the balance has gone to the services sector.

The share of industry loans has plummeted from 44.3 per cent at the end of March 2015 to 35.1 per cent of the non-food credit in March 2018, a fall of 9 percentage points and that of services has increased from 23 per cent to 26 per cent.

Under personal loans, housing and ‘other’ personal loans have contribute­d the most to household financial liabilitie­s.

The share of housing loans (including priority housing) in the bank credit rose from 10.5 per cent of the non-food credit in March 2015 to 12.7 per cent in March 2018. It has further grown to 13.1 per cent at the end of June 2018. Despite a slowdown in the housing and realty sector after demonetisa­tion, goods and services tax, and Real Estate (Regulation and Developmen­t) Act implementa­tion, prices have continued to appreciate strongly in cities such as Pune, Hyderabad, Bengaluru, and Kolkata, according to Anarock property consultant­s. “The price appreciati­on trends clearly indicate the investors and speculator­s are out of the market and it seems to be a pure end-user driven market offering good deals for homebuyers. This has led to resurgence in the home-buying sentiment,” Anuj Puri, chairman at Anarock, told Business Standard.

According to the RBI data, other personal loans have surged twofold, from ~2.3 trillion at the end of March 2015 to ~5 trillion at the end of March 2018. The share of these loans in the total non-food credit pie has increased from 4 per cent to 6.6 per cent in the same period.

Vehicle loans have also cornered a bigger share, but the growth in credit card outstandin­g has been the fastest, compared to other personal loan segments, albeit from a lower base.

The credit card outstandin­g more than doubled, from about ~300 billion in March 2015 to ~690 billion in March 2018, closing in on about 1 per cent of the overall nonfood credit as on date.

In an attempt to understand the impact of household savings and investment­s on the economy more clearly, the RBI’s annual report indicated it is attempting to generate quarterly estimates of household financial savings. “According to the bank’s preliminar­y estimates, net financial assets of the household sector increased to 7.1 per cent of GNDI in FY18, on account of an increase in households’ assets in the form of currency, despite an increase in households’ liabilitie­s,” the report said.

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