Business Standard

2 Psbs tobe pr iv at is ed

- NIKUNJ OHRI New Delhi, 1 February

BIG-BANG REFORMS FOR THE FINANCIAL SECTOR

Showing its clear intent on privatisat­ion, the government would p riva ti se two public sector b an ks(psbs) and one general insurance company, finance mini stern irma las it ha ram an said. Of the ~1.75 trillion divestment target set for the next financial year, the government expects ~1 trillion to come from divestment of its stake i np sbs and financial institutio­ns.

Reiteratin­g the government’s intention on privatisat­ion, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Monday that two public sector banks (PSBS) and one general insurance company will be privatised.

The government will introduce legislativ­e amendments to privatise these banks in the current Budget session. Of the ~1.75 trillion divestment target set for the next fiscal, the government expects ~1 trillion to come from divestment of its stake in PSBS and financial institutio­ns.

The Budget has also laid the road map for overhaulin­g public sector enterprise­s with the announceme­nt of the broad details of the privatisat­ion policy. The policy classifies CPSES, banks, and insurance companies into four strategic areas —atomic energy, space, and defence; transport and telecom; power, petroleum, and other minerals; and, banking, insurance and financial services.

In all other sectors, PSUS will be either privatised or closed. There were about 249 PSUS in 2018-19, of which 70 incurred losses of ~31,635 crore, according to data from the Standing Conference of Public Enterprise­s. The decision to privatise two PSBS and one insurance firm underlines government’s commitment to limit its presence even in strategic sectors, industry body FICCI said in a press release.

Divestment target slashed

The government has slashed its divestment target sharply for the current fiscal as the Covid19 pandemic marred the exercise. The divestment receipt for the current fiscal has been revised to ~32,000 crore from ~2.1 trillion estimated earlier.

This is because a number of transactio­ns – namely Bharat Petroleum Corporatio­n, Air India, Shipping Corporatio­n of India, Container Corporatio­n of India, IDBI Bank, BEML, Pawan Hans, Neelachal Ispat Nigam, among others – will be completed in 2021-22.

SPV for asset monetisati­on

The government will set up a special purpose vehicle (SPV) that will carry out monetisati­on of surplus land holdings of public sector companies and government department­s.

“Monetising of land can either be by way of direct sale or concession or by similar means,” Sitharaman said. This requires special abilities, and a SPV in the form of a company would carry out this activity, she said.

To enable transfer of surplus land to the SPV, the government has introduced section 8G to the Indian Stamp Act through which such a transfer will not be liable to stamp duty, said Sandeep Shah, managing partner at NA Shah Associates.

Strategic divestment

To accelerate divestment, NITI Aayog will be asked to work on the next list of PSUS that can be taken up for strategic disinvestm­ent. The central government will also incentivis­e states to divest their public sector companies.

The government will also come up with a revised mechanism for timely closure of lossmaking PSUS.

The government will also relax the condition for carrying forward of loss for divested PSU in amalgamati­on. Transfer of PSUS assets to another firm has also been made tax neutral.

A discipline­d disinvestm­ent glide path would help the government mitigate the pain of a burgeoning fiscal deficit, while giving private entreprene­urs the opportunit­y to increase productivi­ty of CPSES, said Nischal Arora, partner, Nangia & Co. “Given the expansiona­ry mode of government expenditur­e, this assumes an even greater relevance than ever before,” he said.

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