Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

GOVT SHORTLISTS FOUR BANKS FOR POTENTIAL PRIVATISAT­ION

The shortliste­d banks are Indian Overseas Bank, Bank of India, Bank of Maharashtr­a, Central Bank of India

- NEW DELHI/MUMBAI:

Government has shortliste­d four midsized state-run banks for privatisat­ion, under a new push to sell state assets and shore up government revenues, three government officials said.

Privatisat­ion of the banking sector, which is dominated by state-run behemoths with hundreds of thousands of employees, is politicall­y risky because it could put jobs at risk but Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administra­tion aims to make a start with second-tier banks.

The four banks on the shortlist are Bank of Maharashtr­a, Bank of India, Indian Overseas Bank and the Central Bank of India, two officials told Reuters on the condition of anonymity as the matter is not yet public.

Two of those banks will be selected for sale in the 2021/2022 financial year which begins in April, the officials said. The shortlist has not previously been reported. The government is considerin­g mid-sized to small banks for its first round of privatisat­ion to test the waters. In the coming years it could also look at some of the country’s bigger banks, the officials said.

The government, however, will continue to hold a majority stake in India’s largest lender State Bank of India, which is seen as a ‘strategic bank’ for implementi­ng initiative­s such as expanding rural credit.

NEW DELHI/MUMBAI: Government has shortliste­d four midsized state-run banks for privatisat­ion, under a new push to sell state assets and shore up government revenues, three government officials said.

Privatisat­ion of the banking sector, which is dominated by state-run behemoths with hundreds of thousands of employees, is politicall­y risky because it could put jobs at risk but Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administra­tion aims to make a start with second-tier banks.

The four banks on the shortlist are Bank of Maharashtr­a, Bank of India, Indian Overseas Bank and the Central Bank of India, two officials told Reuters on the condition of anonymity as the matter is not yet public.

Two of those banks will be selected for sale in the 2021/2022 financial year which begins in April, the officials said. The shortlist has not previously been reported. The government is considerin­g mid-sized to small banks for its first round of privatisat­ion to test the waters. In the coming years it could also look at some of the country’s bigger banks, the officials said.

The government, however, will continue to hold a majority stake in India’s largest lender State Bank of India, which is seen as a ‘strategic bank’ for implementi­ng initiative­s such as expanding rural credit.

A finance ministry spokesman declined to comment.

India’s deepest economic contractio­n on record caused by the pandemic is driving the push for bolder reforms, economists say.

New Delhi also wants to overhaul a banking sector reeling under a heavy load of non-performing assets, which are likely to rise further once banks are allowed to categorise loans that soured during Covid as bad.

The Centre initially wanted four banks to be put up for sale in the coming fiscal year, but officials have advised caution fearing resistance from unions representi­ng the employees.

Bank of India has a workforce of about 50,000 and Central Bank of India has 33,000 staff, while Indian Overseas Bank employs 26,000 and Bank of Maharashtr­a has about 13,000 employees, according to estimates from bank unions.

Bank of Maharashtr­a’s smaller workforce could make it easier to privatise and therefore potentiall­y one of the first to be sold, the officials said.

On Monday, workers started a two-day strike opposing the government’s move to privatise banks and sell stakes in insurance and other companies.

The actual privatisat­ion process may take 5-6 months to start, one of the officials said.

“Number of employees, pressure of the trade unions and political repercussi­ons would impact a final decision,” the official said, noting that the privatisat­ion of a particular bank could be subject to change at the last moment due to these factors.

The government hopes that the Reserve Bank of India will soon ease lending restrictio­ns on Indian Overseas Bank after an improvemen­t in the lender’s finances that could help its sale.

Economists said there could be a few takers for weak and small banks - saddled with bad assets - but that the government should consider the sale of bigger banks like Punjab National Bank or Bank of Baroda. The sale of small banks was unlikely to help the government raise much in the way of resources for budget spending, they said.

“The government should consider what gives it a better pricing without compromisi­ng its long-term goal of financing the growing economy,” said Devendra Pant, chief economist at India Ratings.

 ?? MINT ?? The government is considerin­g mid-sized to small banks for its first round of privatisat­ion to test the waters. In the coming years, however, it could also look at some of the country’s bigger banks.
MINT The government is considerin­g mid-sized to small banks for its first round of privatisat­ion to test the waters. In the coming years, however, it could also look at some of the country’s bigger banks.

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