Financial engineering
needed to ensure bank recap plan doesn’t dent economy
Ring-fencing could be an option, says
Sanjeev Sanyal
The Finance Ministry may have to do some tough financial
engineering to ensure that the latest ₹2.11-lakh crore recapitalisation plan
for public sector banks does not further strain the country’s economy at a time
when there are concerns over growth slowdown.
The Ministry, which is expected to come out with a mechanism
to implement this package that envisages recapitalisation bonds, will have to
keep in mind the concerns being raised on impact on fiscal deficit – a
situation where total expenditure exceeds the revenue.
Recapitalisation bonds count as debt after all and it is the
government that is going to issue them.
Sanjeev Sanyal, Principal Economic Advisor to the Ministry
of Finance, while pointing out that this is a legacy issue, told BusinessLine that
“It can be argued that it is unfair to load it on to the fiscal deficit because
it is a pre-existing problem which is being recognised and resolved now.
Therefore, it should be ring-fenced in some fashion from the usual fiscal
trajectory. I think it is a fair point.”
Unlike the International Monetary Fund accounting practices,
where bank recapitalisation need not be part of the deficit, according to
Indian accounting practices they are. “Now, it is a longer debate whether we
change our accounting standard or not. So, for this particular issue, it may be
easier to just ring-fence it.”
Two reasons
Sanyal gave two reasons for his suggestion: First, it will
clarify for what the money is being used, and second, the value of government
holdings in public sector banks. “Deficits do not always have a directly
corresponding asset. But, here there is a liability side as well as an asset
side. You are getting equity from the banks – there is a possibility of getting
direct returns from it,” he points out.
Ask him on how will the recap bonds work, he explains,
“Bonds will come from the government. Banks actually have lot of cash. The
reason they are not lending is because they are not fully capitalised. If banks
do not have underlying capital, they can’t lend as norms do not allow them to
do so.”
With lots of cash, what do you do? “So, here is a peculiar
situation where banks have lot of cash, but cannot lend, whereas RBI has
liquidity management problems and ends up paying interest for this,” he
elaborates, adding that “Now what government can do is borrow some of this cash
using recap bonds, then put it back in the banks as capital. Then banks can
leverage the capital and lend again.”
When asked whether this decision came a bit late, Sanyal
says, “There was a reason for this. If the government did it too early, culture
change in the banking system wouldn’t have happened and we would have merely
funded yet another round of ever-greening. So the authorities had to hold their
nerve a little in order to force realistic NPA resolutions and insolvency as
well as force banks to write-down and make provisions. Only when there was some
amount of pain on all parties, there will be a cultural change.”
Insolvency code
Asked if he was hinting at the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code,
he says, “If recapitalisation had been done too early, then banks and debtors
would not improve but go back to doing what they were doing before. Hence it
was decided to use the IBC to force resolution and to empower RBI with an
ordinance. Earlier, nobody was interested in resolving – neither the
institutions nor debtors – because that was the culture of eternal
ever-greening. IBC, NCLT and RBI’s enhanced powers caused a cultural break in
the way of doing business and forced serious, proper economic resolutions.”
“Just read the papers to see how resolution is suddenly
taken seriously,” he points out.
The Finance Minister, Arun Jaitley, when talking about this
package had emphasised on lending to SMEs.
Asked if the Ministry was making some special dispensation
for SMEs, he says, “SMEs are part of larger picture as SMEs are especially
dependent on bank financing. Even if they were good SMEs and doing everything
right, suddenly they found their working capital squeezed because the bank was
not willing to give normal credit, or the corporate they were supplying was
going into bankruptcy.”
“And unlike a big company which can go out and issue
corporate bonds or borrow abroad, the SME is dependent on the banking system.
"There is recognition that this segment has faced part
of the burden for this culture change, and so there is need for greater
emphasis in this space.”
Source
| Business Line | 6th November 2017
Regards!
Librarian
Rizvi Institute of
Management
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