Millennium Post

Govt giving top priority to addressing bad loans issue: Jaitley

- MPOST BUREAU

NEW YORK: Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has asserted that the government was giving top priority to addressing the issue of bad loans while acknowledg­ing that the problem of non-performing assets was “adversely impacting” the Indian banking system.

Speaking at the Council on Foreign Relations here, Jaitley termed the resolution of the Non-performing Assets (NPAS) as the “one very big challenge” going forward and the government’s “top priority” at the moment.

He said the magnitude of the NPAS problem was that essentiall­y it was about 20 to 30 big accounts.

“It’s not a problem spread over hundreds of thousands of accounts... and it’s not impossible for a large economy like India to resolve 20 to 30 accounts. So it’s not an insurmount­able problem. I think it’s just persisted too long, but it’s certainly adversely impacting us,” he said.

“So if you were to ask me, there are a series of reforms/changes which we’ve successful­ly made. This is one hurdle which we are now required to jump, and that’s where our current focus is,” he said on Monday.

However, Jaitley said there was one constraint the government was facing.

“It’s not a constraint on the leadership quality in the bank, but it’s a constraint on the environmen­t in which the bank bureaucrac­y functions. I have seen that the banks are not bold enough to take their decisions because... our anti- corruption law is still a pre-liberalisa­tion law,” he said.

Jaitley emphasised that one of the fundamenta­l flaws in the anti-corruption law has been that erroneous decisionma­king, which may be taking hair cuts in order to settle, gets identified as an act of corruption.

The parliament­ary committee has unanimousl­y recommende­d that this is corrected, he said.

“And this is at the final stage now. The recommenda­tion of a larger consensus parliament­ary committee has come. Hopefully, in the next session we will take this up,” he said.

“The bank bureaucrac­y is going to be -- or, for that matter, any bureaucrac­y or a public servant dealing with economic decisions, then they can decide on commercial considerat­ions rather than be constraine­d as to the future consequenc­es of their action itself,” Jaitley said.

“So the decision between a possible commercial decision being treated as an act of corruption, I think that the law has to eliminate that possibilit­y,” he said.

The Reserve Bank of India has come out with several guidelines and schemes under which the banks have been empowered, Jaitley said.

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