The Asian Age

Centre will bail out ailing banks: Jaitley

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Amidst concerns regarding the high non performing assets constraini­ng the banking system’s ability to support growth, finance minister Arun Jaitley on Friday said the government will take all necessary measures to strengthen the bank’s balance sheet.

While addressing the 70th annual general meeting of Indian Bank Associatio­n (IBA), Mr Jaitley said improving the lending capacity of banks and encouragin­g private sector investment­s are the two biggest challenges confrontin­g India.

“The government certainly stands one with the banking system. Whatever steps that are required to be taken to find a resolution to this problem, we will expeditiou­sly work with India’s banking system in order to strengthen it,” he said adding that the several measures taken by the government including the implementa­tion of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy code would help the timely resolution of stressed assets issues in the banking system.

According to a recent report by Icra, public sector bank’s advances grew by less than 1 per cent Y-oY during Q1FY2018. The Tier-I capital of PSBs stood at 9.7 per cent of risk weighted assets as on June 30, 2017 as against the regulatory requiremen­ts of 9.5 per cent required by March 31, 2019, indicating the limited capital cushion available to grow the advances.

The increasing regulatory

ON CONCERN regarding the weak growth, Jaitley reminded India’s ability to reform and grow at a reasonable pace even when the global economy was experienci­ng a slowdown

capital requiremen­ts, weak internal accruals and limited capital infusion by the government according to Icra have forced PSBs to go into capital conservati­on mode by constraini­ng their lending activities.

On concern regarding the weak economic growth, he reminded India’s ability to reform and grow at a reasonable pace even when the global economy was experienci­ng a slowdown.

“India has adequately demonstrat­ed its ability to reform. Indian has adequately demonstrat­ed its ability to grow at a reasonable pace even when the world was going slow. Indian public opinion today is more supportive of reform than it ever was. And therefore, India’s ability to face challenges as they are thrown up in the economy today, I think is certainly much better, much higher than what it traditiona­lly has been,” Mr Jaitley added.

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