Showing posts with label Central Bank. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Central Bank. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

The new banking time in India



The Indian banking is undergoing through some unusual structural changes and naturally the news has been making round about one of those, which is ‘differentiated banks’. As widely reported and circulated, the RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan is a firm believer in the ideas behind it, and thus the central bank’s guidelines come so hands-on this, it leaves no chance unturned to make the keen watcher believe, these new institutions will end all ill in existing system at place.

In principle, the payments banks and small banks are ‘niche’ or ‘differentiated’ banks – with the common objective of furthering financial inclusion. The Small Banks will provide all the basic banking products but will have a limited area of operation – and the Payments Banks will provide a limited range of products, such as, acceptance of demand deposits and remittances of funds, but will have a widespread network of access points particularly to remote areas.

The role of technology and Business Correspondents (BCs) would be crucial for these new banks, like all other existing banks working in rural and semi-urban areas. So, what is new in that? Nothing much. The concept of local area banks came long back in India – and in fact, the Regional Rural Banks (RRBs) took that concept of local banks much ahead than anticipated earlier.

Today, total 57 RRBs have more than 16, 664 branches – remarkably, these banks are still operative at low cost than PSBs and Private Sector Banks in rural terrains – and most of them are in profit. Surprisingly, the RBI has no plan to make these banks more aggressive – and making addition of the Post Offices, as next banking institutions.

The NABARD has for long ceased to offer any noble solutions for rural banking in India, so even in close bearings with the Chicago School of Economic Thought – Rajan should scrimp little bit time and vision to put forth a workable model rather loosing time with too romantic ideas of ‘differentiated banks’ – that appears in its idealistic fold, beating the blue eyed professionals’ flop venture in India, MFIs.

In retrospection, we would get some insights on failures from the distant land of west that has been charming Indian policy makers in recent few years like never before. The ‘hole and corner’ life philosophy of Wall Street bankers and their understanding about the game of banking could be summed-up in few clumsy but truthful words: ‘for them – money is fact, rest all is fiction’.

Time and again, these words came into fruition and brought to the world, such ‘catastrophe’ – not normally to be hatched by someone having capacity lesser than of a double-dealer.

This clears the fog to know that the winds from west seldom come with underlying merits to be known ‘progressive’. This reckoning was although at place in late 1960’s when Indira Gandhi redrawn the character of Indian banking in a single stroke of pen by nationalising fourteen major commercial banks of that time. The inherent aim was much broader and that for creating the culture of profitable Public Sector banking in India – with focus on strengthening the core economy of the country, through readily available banking services hitherto denied.

These banks played their role to an extent and indeed ensured banking among the masses – that exercise could be seen as the biggest financial inclusion drive in India. This was much effective than the Swabhimaan or Jan Dhan Yojna, whose accomplishments would not travel (based on their theoretical positioning) beyond the bank account opening in crores.

Coming to the solution side, the policy debates on banking have to take a cue from erroneously rumoring, the existing banking players in India are wimps – they are not actually. So, selling the already used applications of mobile, low cost innovations would not help now – the real course of correction would be through differentiating between the performer and pretender.

For making financial inclusion effective and rural banking spectrum, free from the unrealistic notions – first and foremost, the RBI should trust more on the RRBs, besides making PSBs and Private Banks less pampered, so they can work and don’t show excuse that the ‘baking is expensive for poor’. They should make profit by banking with the poor, but must stop making BCs, not only poor – but pauper, by offering less than 1/3rd of minimum wage made mandatory by the Constitutional provisions.

The Post Offices have already a huge network at place that covers the nook and corner of the entire country. If the Finance Ministry and the RBI is really serious for going ahead with actual financial inclusion drive – the next banking license should be given to the Post Offices. As not all existing things could be called bad – the time is ripe now to make the plethora of ‘innovations’, truly grounded and coming into terms with the realities of India.

Also an understanding should be at place, the Indian banking is not in nascent phase – and it certainly has some strong economic fundamentals, which giving enough reasons for the banks to get serious about their business prospects. Even those have not returned recently after attending a short-term crash course on ‘emerging economies’ in any Ivy-League Institution (including this writer), can have a logical edge in saying Indian villages have enough too offer for the bank, who will follow the basics of banking there. Not that any show of dramatics would return back well.

The game plan should be to make better course and stay on that. A differently famous, Gordon Gekko from Wall Street (1987), delivered these words very aptly, ‘don’t run when you lose – don't whine when it hurts’.The banking in new time in India has to go that way, it could be said by this moderate polemist!
-Atul K Thakur
Email: summertickets@gmail.com
(Published in INCLUSION)

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Goldman Sachs-You too Brute!

Now, when the things started to slowly settled down at the Wall Street and regulators found time to back in their usual business; a new storm meanwhile again breakdown those slight cheering-this time, fraud originated from iconic investment bank Goldman Sachs through creation of huge investment designed to fail. The fraud struck inside the Goldman Sachs marks an unusual tracts as the firm marketed mortgage-backed securities as they sought to make profits by betting that such securities would plummet in value –surprisingly, regulatory norms in U.S.A never legally prohibited such act until the fraud broke out, now Securities and Exchange Commission {SEC}has making some statuary advances and now labeling charge on Goldman Sachs for creating and marketing securities that were deliberately designed to fail.
So top notch client could make money off that failure-unfortunately such case is not alone confined with Goldman Sachs, impropriety is still rampant among the top-notch professionals in financial sector and within a year, they forget about the alarm of bailouts…Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs is still dwelling with the complacency of $3.46 billion dollars profit which his bank has made in the last quarter of previous financial year and hardly paying any heed to the civil suit which SEC has filled on 16th April.

This clearly marks the falling ethical standard in financial sector-this case has strengthened the belief that any expectations for voluntary compliance of ethical practices are void, so regulatory norms that govern these sorts of transactions needed an immediate tectonic shift. Rectification must start from a statuary mandate to all derivative trade on exchange and in standard contracts, not in customized, built to suit arrangements like the ones Goldman created in this new episode.
Hedging as an instrument met with misdemeanor through such occurrence, usually banks that have lent money to low-credit borrowers use swaps as a hedge that ensure them from further defaults-till this stage nothing seems wrong but it’s only one side of history. The grave problem is that Credit Default Swaps {CDS} route is open to anyone even to those who haven’t possess any sort of credibility-this led to reckless speculation to bet on entities, in which even they don’t have any entitlement that in loose terms present cases like letting your neighbor take out an insurance policy on your life.

These unhygienic practices by the smart guys from Wall Street who placed on top order after scoring high grades in Ivy League business schools hardly resemble any constructiveness in their professional involvement. Crux of problem lies in the pushing of the unaware entities into these risky schemes-such like ABASCUS2007-AC1; most of them were foreign banks and pension funds, they lost about a billion dollars.
Top order of management at Goldman Sachs were pressed through greed’s to convey right message to customers that investments offered by the bank were supported by very risky mortgages in an already over-priced U.S Housing market-major factor of these shading was Johan Paulson{a billionaire investor}who influenced the bank’s selection of these instrument since he knows they were bad risks but going to beneficial from personnel shake-he alone made billions of dollars by indulging in betting that loan in transaction would fail. It’s quite astonishing to see again the insurer of Goldman Sachs, AIG to indulge in such bad deal within a year after its massive bailout with $180 billion, hard earned money of taxpayers.

The entire case is a brazen example of predatory use of mass investors in favour of few mighty by adopting the means of misinterpretation and deceiving through the myopic route of Collateralized Debt Obligations {CDO}. This is an explicit crime from high ranked officials who are unlikely to face any stern action even after all disclosure-rather they may be awarded with multi million dollars as bonus with the bailouts money. It’s hard to expect from these greedy professionals to display their skills for social betterment…running Ferrari and making millions dollars would remain their pastime for job regardless of this disastrous fraud. As the last resorts, the regulators have to perform their final duty…what one can expect more from them than some more initiatives in financial sector reform especially in the derivatives trading. Greed must be controlled and choreographed to adapt with the limitation of real life…
Atul Kumar Thakur
April 24th 2010, Saturday, New Delhi
atul_mdb@rediffmail.com

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Establishment of RBI: A brief Account

Warren Hastings, the Governor of Bengal during the twilight of eighteenth century was an unusual top end British official who introduced some noble changes within his jurisdiction in colonial India albeit his later life completely defied his preeminence and early fortune as he became the first top notch British official to pass through the disgraceful ire of impeachment. Anyway, Warren Hastings in his capacity of the Governor of Bengal recommended the establishment of a “General Bank in Bengal and Bihar” in January 1773.
Although this ceremonial initiation not lasted for long albeit the other proposal for amalgamation of three Presidency Banks {Bengal, Bombay and Madras} in 1866 were somehow remarkable which remained into existence with frequent renewal of policy intricacies. These three Presidency banks were finally amalgamated in 1921 with the incarnation as Imperial Bank of India.

Initially it was not structured to play a full scale role of a central bank nevertheless it proceeded with the optimization between the dual tough role of commercial entity with specific central banking leaning. But it remained abstained from key monetary planning-like note issue and management of foreign exchange which remained the business of Central government. Meanwhile in 1926, the Royal Commission on Indian Currency {also known as Hilton Young Commission} recommended that the dichotomy of functions and divisions of responsibility for control of currency and credit should be ended.
The commission finally came out with an idea for establishment of a Central bank with the name of “Reserve Bank of India {RBI}” with gross distinction from dominant Imperial bank-further, RBI’s continuance was contemplated imperative for advancement of banking culture in entire length and width of the country. Later with some more stout deliberations at the both Assembly and the Council of State-the contemporary Governor General approved the formation of RBI on March 6,1934. Our strong Central bank, in its current form was finally inaugurated on April 1, 1935-rest is history; the way as an apex institution, it has been playing key roles in country’s economic and financial advanceness is indeed a great accomplishment-it’s hardly astonishing today, that it placed among the top Central banks of the world.

Atul Kumar Thakur
Februray21st 2010, New Delhi
atul_mdb@rediffmail.com