Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

GOVT DISCUSSES DROPPING DEBT PLAN FOR AI SALE

- →P12

MUMBAI: India is proposing to drop a condition that the winning bidder for Air India Ltd will have to take on $3.3 billion of aircraft debt, people with knowledge of the matter said, as the government struggles to sell the loss-making carrier.

The government is being advised to drop the rule on concern it will deter buyers, they said, adding a group of bureaucrat­s has vetted the plan, and potential buyers will be allowed to bid on the enterprise value and not on the entity value.

NEW DELHI: State-run banks are poised to get ₹20,000 crore through recapitali­zation bonds this financial year, at a time the coronaviru­s crisis threatens to bump up bad loans across the banking system.

Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Monday tabled the first batch of supplement­ary demand for grants in the Parliament, reflecting additional expenses sought by various ministries beyond the budget allocation­s. It indicates the spending appetite of the government.

“For meeting the expenditur­e towards recapitali­zation of public sector banks (PSBs) through issue of government securities— ₹20,000 crore,” the supplement­ary demand for grants document read. Capital infusion through issue of government bonds will not impact fiscal deficit in the current financial year, as there is no cash outgo.

While the 2020-21 budget did not make any allocation for bank recapitali­zation, the previous budget had promised ₹70,000 crore to ‘boost credit for a strong impetus to the economy’. During 2017-18 and 2018-19, there were budgetary provisions as well as recapitali­zation bonds.

Experts said recapitali­zation of state-owned banks is critical for economic growth.

“Given the impact of the pandemic on the economy, it is essential for the banks to provide credit support to get the economy back on a growth trajectory. If banks are saddled with nonperform­ing assets, new credit inflows will be difficult. To make the banks lend more, the government wants to infuse capital, which may have eroded due to higher pandemic provisions,” said Kuntal Sur, a partner at PwC. The central bank had also called for capital infusion into banks. The Reserve Bank also said that bad loans are expected to rise to a 20-year high to 12.5% of total advances by March 2021, and had warned that if the economic conditions worsen further, this may soar to 14.7% under severely stressed scenario.

 ?? PTI ?? Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman.
PTI Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman.

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