Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Discipline borrowers and minimise NPAs

This refers to your edit ‘credit where it is not due’ (December 26,2011).The NPA menace which was kept under some check for a few years has again been raising its ugly head. More NPAs mean, more resources the banks have to find to maintain capital adequacy. The loss to the economy on account of NPAs is unfortunately made to bear by tax payers as the Govt loses its revenues on account of reduction of GDP because of non performance of assets and also is made to contribute to capital through budgetary provisions to enable the banks to maintain the capital adequacy standards as per Basle norms. Further, the cost of NPAs is unknowingly borne by all stakeholders of banks other than by the bad borrowers is an unfortunate reality. The fact that banks can camouflage NPAs and keep them under the carpet is well known and the hidden NPAs are difficult to be identified. Added to this, the permission granted by the Reserve Bank in August 2008 to restructure some of the unsatisfactory accounts and treat them as standard assets if found viable, has helped banks to keep the NPAs down artificially.
It is for the Govt and the Reserve Bank to seriously view the NPA menace and introduce a lasting solution perhaps acceptable to all stakeholders of banks other than borrowers. Time has come to give a serious thought to discipline the borrowers and to contain the problem of NPAs. Since only banks and borrowers do figure in the generation of NPAs, the only and ideal way to come out of this ever greening problem is to have a built in mechanism to liquidate NPAs by means of creating a fund under the nomenclature Precautionary Margin Reserve Fund (PMR) involving all borrowers and banks themselves. This has to be done on a systematic and scientific basis. Over a period this fund will be more than the formation of NPAs, and this approach can strengthen the vitally missing credit discipline among the borrowers. This suggestion developed through a statistical model has been found workable resulting in disciplining the borrowers and making the balance sheet of the banks strong. The Govt is the major beneficiary in case the solution is introduced.

T.V. Gopalakrishnan
(edited version of this appeared in Business-Standard dt 27/12/11).

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