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PSBs recapitalisation should be part of broader package of financial reforms: IMF

| | Washington

The IMF has said that the recapitalisation of India’s public sector banks should be part of a broader package of financial reforms to speed up the resolution of their massive non-performing assets, which has attracted attention in the backdrop of the Nirav Modi case.

The recent policy reforms to address vulnerabilities in the banking and corporate sectors in India have been significant, International Monetary Fund Deputy Managing Director Tao Zhang said ahead of his visit to India.

The asset quality review, initiated by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in December 2015, prompted banks to take steps to recognise all nonperforming assets and ensure appropriately provisioned balance sheets by March 2017. Other important steps include the new Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, adopted in May 2016; and more recently, the announcement of a majorrecapitalisation of India’s PSBs, he said. According to a recent Assocham-Crisil study, India’s banking sector will be saddled with gross non-performing assets (GNPAs) worth a staggering Rs 9.5 lakh crore by March-end, up from Rs 8 lakh crore in the year-ago period.

“While all are welcome steps, we think the PSB recapitalisation should be part of a broader package of financial reforms to speed up the resolution of NPAs, improve PSB governance, reduce the role of the public sector in the financial system, and enhance bank lending capacity and practices,” Zhang said.

Zhang, however, did not respond to specific question related to the case of Indian diamond merchants Nirav Modi and his uncle Mehul Choksi, who are being investigated for their alleged $2 billion swindling of money from the Punjab National Bank.

“We have seen the reports. As a matter of practice, we do not comment on the operations of individual financial institutions. In general terms, what I can say is that we support the authorities’ ongoing efforts to strengthen the soundness and resilience of India’s financial system,” he said. A team of experts recently conducted an assessment in the context of India’s participation in the IMF/World Bank Financial System Stability Assessment Program (FSAP), he noted.

“The experts found that the RBI has made progress in strengthening banking supervision since the previous assessment in 2011. For instance, a risk-based supervisory approach has been introduced and Basel III norms have been implemented, as is now increasingly common around the world,”  Zhang said.

 
 
 
 
 

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