The Free Press Journal

No of PSBs to come down to 10-15 in coming yrs: Govt

- AGENCIES

India will have 10-15 public sector banks with government's majority stake, down from 21 at present, as part of its plan to consolidat­e banks, Finance Ministry's principal economic advisor Sanjeev Sanyal said Friday. He said cleaning up of the bad loan problems is the first priority and after that the PSU banks could be consolidat­ed.

"There are something like 21-22 public sector banks.. The numbers will be reduced in terms of consolidat­ion, but somewhere to the 10-15 range. We are not going to take it too far down...We need to consolidat­e some of these large number of banks, but be clear that we are not going to reduce these down to some people think like 4-5 national champions. We recognise that that will lead to too many 'too-big- to-fail' banks. Currently, we have one large bank State Bank of India... We do not want to create a large number of them. Then we will have a real problem in terms of concentrat­ion of risks," Sanyal said at the India Economic Summit. He said consolidat­ion of banks is longer term commercial decisions, whereas recapitali­sation of PSBs is "more an urgent issue" in order to get the banking system running again. Adding to inefficien­t banks does not lead to a bigger efficient bank. So, this cleaning up of the bad loans problem is the first priority, he said.

As part of the clean up process, the RBI has already started recognisin­g the bad assets, provision them and is taking some of them to bankruptcy and insolvency process. "Now, the second step consequent­ly is recapitali­sation and getting these banks running again... that will be done in next few months. The government is fully aware that we need a much larger banking system by factors of multiple than what it is today," Sanyal said, adding India's banking system is way too small for future and needs to be expanded significan­tly. Recapitali­sation bonds is one of the options for infusing capital into banks, he said, adding that the government could also dilute its stake in some lenders to 52 per cent. "There are many options and all of them will be explored in combinatio­n," he said.

In the last consolidat­ion drive, five associate banks and Bharatiya Mahila Bank (BMB) became part of State Bank of India (SBI) on April 1, 2017, catapultin­g the country’s largest lender to among the top 50 banks in the world. State Bank of Bikaner and Jaipur (SBBJ), State Bank of Hyderabad (SBH), State Bank of Mysore (SBM), State Bank of Patiala (SBP) and State Bank of Travancore (SBT), besides BMB, were merged with SBI. While deciding on the consolidat­ion, the ministry would keep in mind factors like regional balance, geographic­al reach.

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