The Asian Age

RBI, govt signal truce after 9- hour meet; key issues referred to panel

■ Board suggests restructur­ing scheme for stressed assets of MSMEs

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issues that had kept the central bank and the finance ministry at loggerhead­s.

“The board decided to constitute an expert committee to examine the ECF, the membership and terms of reference of which will be jointly determined by the Government of India and the RBI,” the central bank said in a statement.

Sources said the next meeting of the RBI’s board would be held on December 14.

Currently, the capital base of RBI is ` 9.69 lakh crores, and independen­t director and swadeshi ideologue S. Gurumurthy and the finance ministry have been wanting it to be lowered in line with global practices.

The expert committee to be set up will now decide about the adequate size of capital base.

The central bank’s board, headed by RBI governor

Urjit Patel, which met amid the ongoing tussle between the finance ministry and the central bank over various issues, discussed the Basel regulatory capital framework, a restructur­ing scheme for stressed MSMEs, bank health under the Prompt Corrective Action ( PCA) framework and the Economic Capital Framework ( ECF).

Mr Patel and his deputies came face to face with the government nominee directors — economic affairs secretary Subhash Chandra Garg and financial services secretary Rajiv Kumar — and independen­t members like S. Gurumurthy to arrive at a middle ground on some of the contentiou­s issues.

According to sources, no voting on any proposal took place and a detailed presentati­on was made by RBI deputy governor N. S.

No voting takes place at marathon meet, and no talk of Urjit Patel resigning

Next meeting of RBI central board is due to be held on December 14

Vishwanath­an to the board. Mr Vishwanath­an is in charge of banking regulation and supervisio­n. The board also advised that the RBI should consider a scheme for the restructur­ing of stressed standard assets of MSME borrowers with aggregate credit facilities of up to ` 25 crores, subject to such conditions as are necessary for ensuring financial stability.

Most of the RBI’s 10 independen­t directors, including Tata Sons chairman N. Chandrasek­aran, attended the meeting that had drawn intense media and market attention.

With regard to banks under Prompt Corrective Action ( PCA), it was decided that the matter will be examined by the Board for Financial Supervisio­n ( BFS) of the RBI. Of the 21 state- owned banks, 11 are under the PCA framework, which imposes lending and other restrictio­ns on weak lenders. These are Allahabad Bank, United Bank of India, Corporatio­n Bank, IDBI Bank, UCO Bank, Bank of India, Central Bank of India, Indian Overseas Bank, Oriental Bank of Commerce, Dena Bank and Bank of Maharashtr­a.

The PCA framework kicks in when banks breach any of the three key regulatory trigger points — namely capital to risk weighted assets ratio, net non- performing assets ( NPA) and return on assets ( RoA). Globally, PCA kicks in only when banks slip on a single parameter of capital adequacy ratio, and the government is in favour of this practice adopted for the domestic banking sector as well.

The board, while deciding to retain the CRAR at nine per cent, agreed to extend the transition period for implementi­ng the last tranche of 0.625 per cent under the Capital Conservati­on Buffer ( CCB), by one year, that is up to March 31, 2020.

CCB currently stands at 1.875 per cent and remaining 0.625 per cent was to be met by March 2019, as per the deadline fixed by the RBI.

Amid growing tensions with the central bank, the finance ministry had sought discussion­s under the never- used- before Section 7 of the RBI Act which empowers the government to issue directions to the RBI governor.

RBI deputy governor Viral Acharya had in a speech last month talked about the independen­ce of the central bank, arguing that any compromise could be “potentiall­y catastroph­ic” for the economy.

In his first public comments since the spat between the RBI and the finance ministry came out into the open, Mr Gurumurthy had last week said the standoff “is not a happy thing at all”. Mr Gurumurthy, who was appointed to the RBI board a few months back, had said the capital adequacy ratio prescribed in India was one per cent higher than the global Basel norms. He also pitched for easing lending norms for small and medium enterprise­s, which account for 50 per cent of the country’s GDP.

 ??  ?? RBI governor Urjit Patel
RBI governor Urjit Patel

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