The Union Finance Minister Shri Arun Jaitley presented the Economic Survey
2016-17 in the Parliament today. The Survey shows that our country has
been trying to solve its ‘Twin Balance Sheet’(TBS) problem –
overleveraged companies and bad-loan-encumbered banks, a legacy of the boom
years around the Global Financial Crisis. So far, there has been limited
success. The problem has consequently continued to fester: Non-Performing
Assets (NPAs) of the banking system (and especially public sector banks) keep
increasing, while credit and investment keep falling. Now it is time to
consider a different approach – a centralised Public Sector Asset
Rehabilitation Agency (PARA) that could take charge of the largest, most
difficult cases, and make politically tough decisions to reduce debt.
As per the Survey, gross NPAs has climbed to almost 12 per
cent of gross advances for public sector banks at end-September 2016. At this
level, India’s
NPA ratio is higher than any other major emerging market, with the exception of
Russia. The consequent squeeze of banks has led them to slow credit
growth to crucial sectors-especially to industry and medium and small scale
enterprises (MSMEs)-to levels unseen over the past two decades. As this has
occurred, growth in private and overall investment has turned negative . A
decisive resolution is urgently needed before the TBS problem becomes a serious
drag on growth.

The
Survey reaches to the conclusion that a PARA may be necessary because
·
Public discussion of the bad loan
problem has focused on bank capital. But far more problematic is finding a way
to resolve the bad debts in the first place.
·
Some debt repayment problems have been
caused by diversion of funds. But the vast majority has been caused by
unexpected changes in the economic environment after the Global Financial
Crisis, which caused timetables, exchange rates, and growth rate assumptions to
go seriously wrong.
·
This
concentration creates a challenge since large cases are difficult to resolve,
but also an opportunity since TBS could be overcome by solving a relatively
small number of cases.
·
Restoring them to financial health will
require large write-downs.
·
Among
other issues, they face severe coordination problems, since large debtors have
many creditors, with different interests. And they find it hard –financially
and politically—to grant them sizeable debt reductions, or to take them over
and sell them.
·
It
increases the costs to the government since bad debts of the state banks keep
rising, and increases the costs to the economy, by hindering credit, investment,
and therefore growth.
·
Since, private run Asset Reconstruction
Companies (ARCs) have not been successful either in resolving bad debts, though
international experience (especially that of East Asian economies) shows that a
professionally run central agency with the government backing could
overcome the coordination and political issues that have impeded progress over
the past eight years.
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DSM/UM/ST/RS