RBI says banks’ farmer NPAs Rs 7,367 cr
The heart of Palaniappan Chidambaram’s fifth Budget speech — the Rs
60,000 crore farm loan waiver — is nowhere to be found in the body of
the 2008-09 Budget.
The expenditure list did not refer to it even
in small print, like in the case of oil and fertiliser deficits of Rs
18,757 crore kept as an off-budget affair.
Chidambaram has asked
for no budgetary support for his gift and yet wants the Parliament to
bless the write-off of Rs 60,000 crore of bank money, which represents
the hard-earned deposits of people at large —- something over which the
Parliament has no control.
When asked, in the absence of
budgetary support, where from will the banks find the money to book the
write-off, the finance minister has been evasive.
He said the
government will provide liquidity to the banks equivalent to the
write-off over the period during which they would have recovered the Rs
60,000 crore.
Anyone with a basic understanding of finance and
accounts will know that the issue in a write-off, which dents the
profit & loss account, is not liquidity, but solvency and capital
adequacy.
So the minister seems to have gone wrong on first
principles of finance and accounts. Or, if he is right, then the banks
must have already made provisions in their profit & loss accounts
to cover most of the waiver, and already taken the hit in their balance
sheets.
If that is the case, then the finance minister is
suppressing a decision that was taken by the banks themselves and
palming it off as the “momentous” decision of the UPA government.
More
interestingly, according to the latest RBI Report on Trend and Progress
of Banking in India 2006-07 [Page 96] the gross NPA of all commercial
banks put together was Rs 50,519 crore, out of which the share of NPAs
on farmers’ loans was only Rs 7,367 crore.
That is, out of the outstanding farm loans of Rs 230,180 crore, the
gross NPA is Rs 7,367 crore. The net, thus, must be far less.
Chidambaram then tells the nation that banks will write off Rs 60,000 crore as bad loans that are irrecoverable.
See
the effect of the write off. The net owned funds of scheduled
commercial banks as on March 31, 2007, stood at Rs 2,19,174 crore. The
write-off would cut out a huge amount from this number and bring it
down and undermine capital adequacy.
There’s more: Three
disturbing clues indicate that the debt write off decision could be an
interpolation in the Budget speech that had already been readied.
All
that was perhaps done was to add a para, No. 73, which did not affect
the numbers as the waiver was just an oral gift by banks —- there was
no use of government money.
There are some interesting clues which bare how the waiver was smuggled into the budget
First, the idea to write off banks’ debt was never in contemplation as other, perhaps better, measures were in the pipeline.
In
his 2006-07 Budget speech, Chidabaram had referred to the
recommendations of the Dr Radhakrishna Group On Farmers’ Indebtedness
and assured the Parliament that he “would act on the report as soon as
it is received”, implying that the report would be implemented.
The
report, submitted in August 2007, said, contrary to Chidambaram’s view
that the debt due to the banks kill the farmers, it is the farmers’
debt obligations to private money lenders that kill them.
The
group found that some 74% of credit line for farmers came from private
sources at interest ranging from 20% to 36% plus with small farmers who
account for 80% of the indebted dependent more on such loans.
The
panel had called for social efforts to settle the private debts and
also commended one time term loan to the farmers to help them to pay
off the exploitative private loans.
In its mid-term review [October
2007], the RBI constituted a working group to examine the panel’s
suggestions and submit its views by December 2007 after consulting all
stake holders.
The minister’s assurance to the Parliament was being followed up by
the Reserve Bank of India. So, till December 2007, at least there could
be no proposal for a write-off.
The Radhakrishna Group had zeroed in
on the true evil —- private money-lending —- as the villain. But there
is not a word in the Budget speech about how to deal with the menace of
the killer private lending.
Second, the clue within the
minister’s Budget speech is critical. In Paras 10 and 56, Chidambaram
says that by March 2008, agricultural credit will exceed the target to
top Rs 240,000 crore; for the year 2008-09, he set a target of Rs
280,000.
When Paras 10 and 56 were keyed in, obviously the write-off mentioned was nowhere in the horizon.
Here is the math that indicates that it was a later interpolation.
The
figures Rs 240,000 crore for 2007-08 and Rs 280,000 crore for 2008-09
include the amount of Rs 60,000 crore as there was to be no waiver.
Chidambaram
had included the amount of Rs 60,000 crore that will remain part of
loans outstanding and due a year from now. So the decision to write it
off in June 2008 came clearly after keying in of paras 10 and 56.
But at what point in time would this Para 73 have been smuggled in?
A
clue again: On February 20, Chidambaram shared dais with Sonia Gandhi,
Rahul Gandhi and Murali Deora at a farmers’ rally in Rae Bareilly.
Reports
say that Sonia asked Chidambaram in front of the farmers “to keep the
hardships faced by [among others] farmers in mind, while preparing his
Budget”.
Agreeing with her, he told the farmers that the banks
“are not doing a favour when they lend money to you” and added, they
“are discharging their duty, when they are lending the money”.
If,
at Rae Bareilly, Chidambaram reminds banks of their duty to lend,
having already decided in New Delhi to write off what was lent earlier,
that would be, by inference, great deception.
But with Sonia’s
command and the minister’s response at the farmers’ rally, it is more
benign to infer that the ‘momentous’ write-off decision was taken at
the rally or at a tea after the rally, not at North Block.
source: DNA