For bill to shield financial sector
Bill will lead to the setting up of a Resolution Corporation
NEW DELHI: The cabinet has approved a proposal to introduce a bill to deal with bankruptcies of banks, insurers and other financial services firms, seeking to shield the financial system from systemic crises and protect consumers.
The move is in line with an announcement in finance minister Arun Jaitley’s 2016-17 budget speech that the government intends to put in place a comprehensive resolution framework to tackle any potential crises in financial companies.
When enacted, the Financial Resolution and Deposit Insurance Bill, 2017, will lead to the setting up of a Resolution Corporation that will protect the stability and resilience of the financial system; provide deposit insurance to consumers of some categories of financial services up to a reasonable limit; monitor systemically important financial institutions (SIFI); and protect public funds to the extent possible.
“It will also result in the repealing of the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation Act, 1961, to transfer the deposit insurance powers and responsibilities to the Resolution Corporation,” a government statement said.
The corporation covers up to ₹1 lakh worth of deposits by individuals in Indian banks. The proposed Resolution Corporation will help households deal with potential crises at other financial services providers like insurance firms and asset management companies as well.
Insurance firms in India are highly capitalised and unlikely to face bankruptcy, but the new body may need to monitor banks and other financial institutions on a regular basis, said Joydeep K Roy, partner at PwC India.
“Since the new act will also repeal and replace the existing Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation Act, 1961 which currently insures bank deposits up to ₹1 lakh only, the new body can set differential insurance rules for a varied set of deposits,” he added.
Experts said the ministry of finance had borrowed the concept of Resolution Corporation from the Financial Sector Legislative Reform Commission (FSLRC).
“FSLRC designed a single consistent framework for the full financial system. One component in this was the Resolution Corporation, which deals with the failure of most financial firms,” said Ajay Shah, a professor at the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy (NIPFP).
In May 2016, Parliament enacted the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 for nonfinancial entities. The proposed Bill complements the Code by providing a resolution framework for the financial sector.
“Putting these two pieces together, we have an institutional machinery for dealing with the failure of all firms,” Shah said.
Jaitley, in his last year’s budget speech, said a systemic vacuum exists in tackling bankruptcy situations in financial firms. SANFRANCISCO: Uber Technologies Inc. CEO Travis Kalanick told employees on Tuesday he will take time away from the company he helped to found, one of a series of measures the ride-hailing company is taking to claw its way out from under a mountain of controversies.
Kalanick’s move comes after a months-long investigation led former US Attorney General Eric Holder, who was hired by Uber to look into its culture and workplace practices after a female former employee publicly accused the company of what she described as brazen sexual harassment.
Uber on Tuesday released the recommendations from that report, which include reducing Kalanick’s sweeping authority and instituting more controls over spending, human resources and the behaviour of managers.
Kalanick, 40, said he needed the time away to grieve for his recently deceased mother and to work on his leadership skills, according to a staff email seen by Reuters. He did not say how long he would be away.
“If we are going to work on Uber 2.0, I also need to work on Travis 2.0 to become the leader that this company needs and that you deserve,” Kalanick wrote in his email. “During this interim period, the leadership team, my directs, will be running the company.” According to a person familiar with the matter, Kalanick may return to the company whenever he likes.
The company on Tuesday shared with its staff 47 recommendations for management and policy changes that were unanimously adopted by the board on Sunday. Kalanick was not at the meeting, said a person present at the meeting.
The meeting was marred by private equity executive David Bonderman making a sexist remark about women talking too much. He later resigned from the board of directors, calling his comment “careless, inappropriate, and inexcusable”.
The recommendations from Holder’s firm, Covington and Burling, include adding an independent director to the board and considering an independent chair; mandated manager training; and a bigger and more independent audit committee to oversee spending and management. Other recommendations prohibit romances between bosses and their subordinates and create clearer guidelines on the use of drugs and alcohol.