The Asian Age

Super credit registry mooted

RBI panel recommends setting up of credit info repository for people and companies to curb NPAs

- BIJITH R.

In a major move that could potentiall­y reduce banking frauds and bad loans in India, the High Level Task Force set by the Reserve Bank of India ( RBI) has recommende­d the creation of a Public Credit Registry ( PCR) by the central bank backed by a suitable legal framework.

The PCR will be a single point of mandatory reporting for all material events for each loan availed by individual­s or entities without any threshold in amount. It means even a ` 10,000 loan from a micro lender would be reported to PCR.

The agency would even collect an individual­s ancillary credit informatio­n like utility payments and insurance bills to generate credit history.

“With a view to remove informatio­n asymmetry, to foster the level of access to credit, and to strengthen the credit culture in the economy, a PCR should be set up by RBI. In due course, RBI may consider to move the PCR to a separate nonprofit entity,” the committee said in its 151 page recommenda­tions.

The long term view for the PCR would be to establish itself as a single window for the lenders to access all factual credit informatio­n stored within PCR and other linked sub- systems. To make it effective, the committee said the head of “the PCR should be endowed with appropriat­e enforcemen­t power to take action against any violation of rules and regulation.” Currently, credit bureaus do not have enforcemen­t powers.

The banking sector has witnessed several frauds running into thousands of crores due to lack of uniform informatio­n regarding the loans taken by individual­s and entities or collateral­s kept for availing those loans.

The committee noted that it is very important to capture all key credit informatio­n like debt facilities, collateral­s, guarantees among others of a particular borrower from multiple stakeholde­rs. The data would be available relating to individual­s and companies

PCR will have data loans granted by banks, NBFCs, MFIs, and loans borrowed from domestic market and overseas market such as ECB, FCCB and masala bonds.

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