Hindustan Times (East UP)

CENTRE TO SC

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tre referred to its various fiscal policy decisions and the Reserve Bank of India and expressed inability in expanding the scope of reliefs already provided to different sectors.

“It is... submitted that while taking... decision and to supplement the earlier fiscal policy decisions under the ‘Garib Kalyan’ and ‘Aatma Nirbhar’ packages entailing substantia­l financial burden, the respondent government has rationalis­ed the fiscal impact of the same, and that going any further than what has been decided and submitted to the hon’ble court may be detrimenta­l to the overall economic scenario, and the national economy or the banking sector may not be able to take the inevitable financial constraint­s resulting therefrom.”

The official said the Centre’s decision with regard to the question of waiver of interest on interest to bear the burden of compoundin­g of interest in respect of certain categories of loans was taken in the larger public interest only in the specific context of the pandemic, which is, by itself, an unpreceden­ted situation.

Such fiscal policy decisions are taken after an elaborate exercise of gathering of facts, careful assessment of these facts and considerin­g various alternativ­es, keeping in mind the economic impact on financial strength of stakeholde­rs and all other relevant factors, more particular­ly during the pandemic when the global fiscal scenario is equally bad and the fact that it is uncertain as to till what date the present global and national economic stress will continue, the affidavit said.

The Centre said that the recommenda­tions of the Kamath Committee have been broadly accepted by the RBI and the panel found “variable impact of the pandemic across several sectors, with varying degrees of severity and varying nature of problems”.

“A perusal of the entire report would show that it is neither possible nor desirable to arrive at any one particular formula, whether sector-specific or otherwise, to deal with the stress situation arising from the unpreceden­ted pandemic,” it said.

The Kamath panel had made recommenda­tions for 26 sectors that could be factored by lending institutio­ns while finalising loan resolution plans and had said that banks could adopt a graded approach based on the severity of the coronaviru­s pandemic on a sector.

It said that the government extended relief through the “Garib Kalyan package of ₹1.70 lakh crore and the Aatma Nirbhar package.. of ₹20 lakh crore” and various measures have also been taken by RBI to mitigate the adverse financial impact.

It said relief such as “extension of moratorium, applicabil­ity of the resolution framework, fixation of interest rate, transmissi­on of rate cuts, delinking of interest rate from credit rating of the borrower and moratorium on repayment of non-credit instrument­s” have been sought in the petitions.

“This, in turn, requires expertise, technical knowledge of financing, and experience in dealing with the subject. Therefore, eligibilit­y of proposals, benchmarks for viability, assessment of reasonable­ness of assumption­s and, finally, acceptance and monitoring of resolution plans are matters best dealt with between the borrower and lending institutio­ns concerned,” it said and urged the court not to entertain such pleas.

“I state that the lending institutio­ns will be required to take suitable steps for implementi­ng the decision of waiver of interest on interest [compounded interest] in the respective accounts of the eligible borrowers within one month from the aforesaid office memorandum subsequent to which the lending institutio­n will approached the Central Government for reimbursem­ent,” it said.

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