Millennium Post

Survey proposes asset reconstruc­tion agency to deal with huge NPAS

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NEW DELHI: To address the festering Twin Balance Sheet (TBS) problem, the Economic Survey on Tuesday suggested creation of state-owned asset reconstruc­tion company, Public Sector Asset Rehabilita­tion Agency (PARA).

TBS is taking a heavy toll on the health of public sector banks, the Survey presented in Parliament said. At least 13 of these banks accounting for approximat­ely 40 per cent of total loans are severely stressed, with over 20 per cent of their outstandin­g loans classified as restructur­ed or non-performing assets (NPAS), it said.

With such a large fraction of their portfolios impaired, it has become extremely difficult for them to earn enough income on their assets to cover their running and deposit costs, it said.

“Balance sheets of corporates and the balance sheets of banks are still a challenge. We do see evidence of that. You can see the NPAS as percentage of loans are high and rising in the public sector banks,” Chief Economic Adviser Arvind Subramania­n said. One possible strategy would be to create a PARA charged with working out the largest and most complex cases loan resolution, it said.

The delay in loan resolution has put tax payers on the hooks, he said, adding NPA is mounting. Explaining the rationale for PARA, he said the records of the private asset reconstruc­tion companies are very patchy and therefore there is a need for an agency which will take care of both private sector corporates and public sector. It could solve the coordinati­on problem, since debts would be centralise­d in one agency; it could be set up with proper incentives by giving it an explicit mandate to maximise recoveries within a defined time period; and it would separate the loan resolution process from concerns about bank capital, the Survey said.

“For all these reasons, asset rehabilita­tion agencies have been adopted by many of the countries facing TBS problems, notably the East Asian crisis cases,” it said.

PARA is not just about banks, it is a lot about companies, the Survey said.

So far, public discussion of the bad loan problem has focused on bank capital, as if the main obstacle to resolving TBS was finding the funds needed by the public sector banks, it said.

“Without doubt, there are cases where debt repayment problems have been caused by diversion of funds. But the vast bulk of the problem has been caused by unexpected changes in the economic environmen­t: timetables, exchange rates, and growth rate assumption­s going wrong,” it said.

Over the past three years the RBI has implemente­d a number of schemes to facilitate resolution of the stressed asset problem. These include Sustainabl­e Structurin­g of Stressed Assets, Strategic Debt Restructur­ing and Asset Quality Review.

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