Business Standard

Govt may remove bail-in provision from FRDI Bill

- ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY

The Narendra Modi government is likely to remove the controvers­ial “bail-in provision” from the revamped Financial Resolution and Deposit Insurance (FRDI) Bill.

As reported earlier, the finance ministry has started work on reviving the Bill a year after withdrawin­g it. The proposed law was mooted to usher insolvency of financial institutio­ns.

Officials say the redrafted and revamped Bill will be a crucial tool for the government to deal with the liquidity crisis in the non-banking financial company (NBFC) sector, as a number of NBFCS like Infrastruc­ture Leasing & Financial Services and Dewan Housing Finance Corporatio­n (DHFL) have defaulted on their payments to creditors.

“The bail-in clause will be dropped. Details are being worked out. The draft Bill will be ready for inter-ministeria­l consultati­ons soon,” said a senior government official.

According to the “bail-in”

clause, proposed for the first time in the country’s law, customers of a failing financial institutio­n would bear a part of the cost of resolution by reduction in their claims. It was one of many resolution tools in the FRDI Bill, including acquisitio­n and merger.

The late finance minister Arun Jaitley had in August 2017 introduced the FRDI Bill in the Lok Sabha, which proposed a comprehens­ive resolution framework for revival or closure of financial institutio­ns, including commercial banks, insurance companies, NBFCS, and co-operative banks.

The government had proposed setting up an independen­t resolution corporatio­n for carrying out “speedy and efficient resolution of financial firms in distress”. The Bill was referred to a joint committee of Parliament.

However, in August 2018, the then finance minister Piyush Goyal withdrew the FRDI Bill, following concerns raised by public related to the “bail-in” clause and because of a conflict of opinions with various regulators, including the Reserve Bank of India.

Though the government, in a series of clarificat­ions, said the clause would be sparingly used for resolution, concerns persisted among the general public, and the finance ministry believed it was one reason behind a spurt in cash withdrawal seen across the country that led to cash crunch in automated teller machines last year.

 ??  ?? The bail-in” clause proposed that customers of a failing financial institutio­n bear a part of the cost of resolution
The bail-in” clause proposed that customers of a failing financial institutio­n bear a part of the cost of resolution

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