The Bill in this regard is likely to be passed during the second leg of the Budget session starting Monday |
The proposed legislation will help prevent a repeat of PMC-like crisis
There are 1,540 co-operative banks with a depositor base of 86 million having total savings of about ₹5 lakh crore
In a bid to address weaknesses in co-operative banking sector, the Parliament is likely to clear a Bill to amend Banking Regulation Act to bring multi-state co-operative banks under effective regulation of RBI during the Budget session.
The proposed legislation will help prevent a repeat of Punjab and Maharashtra Cooperative Bank-like crisis, sources said.
There are 1,540 co-operative banks with a depositor base of 86 million having total savings of about ₹5 lakh crore.
The Union Cabinet headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi last month gave approval to amend Banking Regulation Act.
The Bill in this regard is likely to be passed during the second leg of Budget session starting Monday. The session ends on April 3.
Having undertaken a slew of measures, including clean up of public sector banks (PSBs), private sector banks, financial institution like IL&FS, non-bank financial corporations (NBFCs), housing finance corporations (HFCs), auditors, rating agencies, this is the last step in making the entire financial ecosystem almost impossible to be gamed, with security of depositors' money being paramount.
To further bolster the confidence of customers, the government has increased deposit insurance cover by five-fold to ₹5 lakh to ensure security of public money in banks.
In the last couple of years, the Department of Financial Services has taken several steps to promote responsive and responsible banking.
As part of clean banking initiative, project cash flows were ring-fenced, enforcement of terms of loan agreements and prior validation of backward and forward linkages were made integral to lending processes.
Besides, the number of banks in loan consortium was capped, reducing borrowers' ability to play one lender off against another.
This was accompanied by data driven risk scoring and scrutiny, comprehensive diligence across data sources and strengthened credit assessment.
To ensure financial health of public sector banks (PSBs), recapitalization of ₹4 lakh crore was undertaken in the last five years. Provision coverage ratio reached a record high of 77 per cent. NPA and slippages are declining with improved asset quality.
As a result of various initiatives taken by the government under Rajiv Kumar, who demitted office as Financial Services Secretary on February 28, the number of PSBs under Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) is down from 11 in 2017 to four.
As many as 12 out of 18 banks are in profit this year as against 19 out of 21 in loss just two years ago with the help of record recovery and reduction in bad loans.
Before joining the Finance Ministry, Kumar was Establishment Officer in Department of Personnel and Training.
He was instrumental in many initiatives including streamlining of promotion and appointment process done by the Appointments Committee of the Cabinet (ACC).
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