Business Standard

Insolvency law caused rift with govt: Urjit Patel

Instead of future-proofing gains, atmosphere to go easy on the pedal ensued, says his book

- BS REPORTER

The move to dilute the new bankruptcy law caused disagreeme­nts between the government and the central bank, former Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Urjit Patel says in his book Overdraft: Saving the Indian Saver, released on Friday.

Patel, who headed the RBI between September 2016 and his sudden resignatio­n in December 2018, says the government seemed to lose enthusiasm for the legislatio­n in the middle of the year he left the central bank.

The rift centred around a February 2018 circular issued by the RBI, which forced banks to immediatel­y classify borrowers as defaulters when they delayed repayments, barred defaulting company founders from trying to buy back their firms during insolvency auctions, and push them into bankruptcy if a resolution timeline wasn’t met.

In a chapter titled “The Empire Strikes Back”, Patel writes the dispositio­n with respect to the insolvency law or, more generally, in the conviction in the pathway, perceptibl­y changed in mid-2018. Instead of buttressin­g and future-proofing the gains thus far, an atmosphere to go easy on the pedal ensued.

Though Patel does not name anybody in the book, the mid-2018 period he refers to is the time when Piyush Goyal held temporary charge of the finance ministry between May and August.

“Until then, for the most part the finance minister and I were on the same page, with frequent conversati­ons on enhancing the landmark legislatio­n’s operationa­l efficiency; we sought feedback on changes to preserve the principles that formed the bedrock of the IBC; which tweaks were likely to work; and where resource improvemen­ts could help; etc. I suspect the government may have felt that the deterrence effect — ‘future defaulters beware, you may lose your business’ — of the IBC had been achieved, and resolute follow-up to help complete the task was, therefore, unwarrante­d,” he writes.

URJIT PATEL, FORMER GOVERNOR, RBI In his book Overdraft: Saving the Indian Saver “SINCE THE TIME-BOUND THREAT OF INSOLVENCY APPLICATIO­N IS NOT CREDIBLE ANYMORE, IT IS UNCLEAR WHAT THREAT POINTS WILL COMPEL RESOLUTION IN 180 DAYS (OR, FOR THAT MATTER, EVEN 365 DAYS)”

But deterrence, Patel writes in the book published by Harpercoll­ins, “works only if defaulters – current and potential – face economic consequenc­es within a (reasonable) timeframe; otherwise we are in danger of a relapse to the days of the discredite­d Securitisa­tion and Reconstruc­tion of Financial Assets and Enforcemen­t of Security Interest Act, 2002 and Recovery of Debts Due to Banks and Financial Institutio­ns Act, 1993.”

Patel’s comments offer a peek into a tussle between the RBI and the government, which led eventually to a U-turn when the Supreme Court last year struck down the RBI’S February circular. The decision “made the insolvency regime vulnerable, possibly brittle,” Patel wrote, and warned that subsequent changes risk reversing gains from efforts to clean one of the world’s largest bad-loan piles.

“Since the time-bound threat of insolvency applicatio­n is not credible anymore, it is unclear what threat points will compel resolution in 180 days (or, for that matter, even 365 days),” Patel writes.

Patel also says, in early 2019, the criteria were relaxed to ‘graduate’ five loss-making banks out of the prompt corrective action, and recapitali­sation of these PCA banks helped them meet the criterion on net non-performing assets (NPAS).

In addition, extension and augmentati­on of forbearanc­e for medium and small enterprise loans were granted at the same time. At the upper end of this forbearanc­e (loans of ~250 million), businesses with annual turnover of up to several hundred crores were beneficiar­ies. “How does this square up with fairness in a country where the average per capita annual GDP is about ~150,000”? he asks in his book.

“We did not have to wait long for the camel’s nose to appear under the tent, forbearanc­e to commercial real estate (living-dead borrowers) was granted in February 2020,” he pointed out.

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