Deccan Chronicle

Centre plans new FRDI Bill, hike in deposit insurance

- MADHUSUDAN SAHOO

With several financial institutio­ns in the country standing on the edge of distress, the Central government is likely to increase insurance cover for bank deposits. Currently, only Rs 1 lakh deposit of each customer is issured.

The Finance Ministry is also mulling to re-look at the most contentiou­s Financial Resolution and Deposit Insurance (FRDI) Bill, a year after it was withdrawn by the government following a huge public outcry against controvers­ial bail-in clause, which led to many depositors prematurel­y cancelling their bank deposits.

“The government wants to hike the insurance cover of customers of a failed financial institutio­n from Rs 1 lakh per depositor at present. We are redrafting the FRDI Bill, and it will be circulated for inter-ministeria­l consultati­on soon,” a top Finance Ministry source told Financial Chronicle. DICGC and RBI,” said the source.

As far as the deposit insurance cover is concerned, it was last hiked in May 1993 to Rs 1 lakh from Rs 30,000 in July 1980. At the end of FY19, the number of registered insured banks stood at 2,098, comprising 157 commercial banks and 1,941 cooperativ­e banks.

“The government will also examine the issues related to the controvers­ial ‘bail-in’ clause in the earlier Bill, and it would explore hiking the deposit insurance cover of customers, and decide whether the resolution framework should apply to public sector banks,” the source added.

Late Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had in Aug’17 introduced the FRDI Bill in the Lok Sabha, which proposed a comprehens­ive resolution framework for revival or closure of financial institutio­ns, including commercial banks, insurance companies, NBFCs, and co-operative banks.

The government had also thought of setting up of an independen­t resolution corporatio­n for carrying out speedy and efficient resolution of financial firms in distress for which the Bill was referred to a joint committee of Parliament then.

However, in August 2018, the then Finance Minister Piyush Goyal withdrew the FRDI Bill, following concerns raised by public related to the ‘bail-in’ clause of the Bill and due to conflict of opinions with various regulators, including RBI.

According to the ‘bail-in’ clause, which was proposed for first time in the country’s law, customers of a failing financial institutio­n would bear a part of the cost of resolution by reduction in their claims and was one of many resolution tools in FRDI Bill, including acquisitio­n and merger.

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