Hindustan Times (Delhi)

CEA pitches for selective capital infusion, privatisat­ion of banks

NEW MEASURES Government set to formulate a set of reforms in the coming days, says Subramania­n

- Gireesh Chandra Prasad gireesh.p@livemint.com

NEWDELHI: Arvind Subramania­n, chief economic adviser in the finance ministry, on Wednesday suggested that measures such as privatisat­ion, selective capital infusion into viable banks and taking stressed loans off the balance sheet of banks will make the record bailout of state-owned banks announced by finance minister Arun Jaitley even more effective.

Delivering a lecture at a Delhi University college, Subramania­n said that reforms, which will be formulated in the coming days, will also minimise the moral hazard of protecting banks from the consequenc­es of their bad decisions in the past.

Selectivel­y infusing capital in viable banks for their future credit growth while keeping infusions in unviable ones to the bare minimum level required for them to meet their capital adequacy ratios will help in narrowing the scope of unviable banks. This will also help in getting maximum bang for the buck, the chief eco- nomic advisor argued, citing former Reserve Bank of India governor YV Reddy.

Subramania­n said one view expressed in public discussion­s on banking reforms is that majority private ownership will help in bringing about an ideal banking world where banks compete domestical­ly and internatio­nally. Although privatisat­ion is not a panacea, public discussion has emphasized “the benefits it will derive from less political interferen­ce and politicall­y directed lending that public ownership has led to in the past”, said Subramania­n.

Experts said privatisat­ion of state-owned banks can help make them more self-reliant. “Under private ownership, banks tend to stand on their feet and adopt a really profitable business model rather than relying on state support of various kinds. It can also make the banking sector more competitiv­e globally,” said Kalpesh Mehta, partner at Deloitte India.

“It is striking how much caution, inertia, and yes, even fear that public sector bank managers experience. That must be addressed,” said Subramania­n. He said that one view is that in future, it may be better to have more private-to-private lending and even private-to-public lending as the public-to-private lending model has proved toxic.

“We want to be careful before we repeat that experiment again,” he said.

He also pitched for taking out stressed loans from bank balance sheets to improve their valuations and help in raising capital from the market.

The recapitali­zation plan that Jaitley announced on Tuesday includes banks raising ₹58,000 crore from the market over two years, in addition to a budget support of ₹18,000 crore and capital infusion of ₹1.35 lakh crore through bonds.

Subramania­n added that the annual interest cost of these bonds to the central government would be about ₹8,000-9,000 crore.

 ?? HT/FILE ?? Arvind Subramania­n: Strong pitch
HT/FILE Arvind Subramania­n: Strong pitch
 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Founder Narayana Murthy has, in the past, accused the previous Infosys board of corporate governance breaches
MINT/FILE Founder Narayana Murthy has, in the past, accused the previous Infosys board of corporate governance breaches

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