India needs to strengthen RBI’s independence, says IMF - Hindustan Times
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India needs to strengthen RBI’s independence, says IMF

Agence France-Presse | ByAgence France-Presse
Dec 21, 2017 08:10 PM IST

The International Monetary Fund said in its annual assessment that despite considerable progress, there was scope for improving oversight of India’s financial sector, including in regards to the independence of Reserve Bank of India.

The International Monetary Fund on Thursday recommended India strengthen the independence of its central bank RBI and bolster resources for its financial system regulators amid a bad debt pile-up at public banks.

The International Monetary Fund recommended India strengthen the independence of the Reserve Bank of India.(REUTERS)
The International Monetary Fund recommended India strengthen the independence of the Reserve Bank of India.(REUTERS)

Indian banks have some of the highest levels of debt of any emerging market, with the bulk of bad loans saddled in public-sector lending institutions.

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This debt burden means that banks have been stretched too thin to lend for fresh investments, holding back growth in Asia’s third-largest economy.

The IMF -- in its annual assessment of the stability of India’s financial system -- said these conditions are testing the resilience of banks.

Larger lenders appear sturdy but “the system is subject to considerable vulnerabilities”, the IMF said in its report.

In particular, a “group of public sector banks are highly vulnerable to further declines in asset quality”, it added.

The IMF said despite considerable progress there was scope for improving oversight of the financial sector, including in regards to the independence of Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

“Notably, these include strengthening the RBI’s de jure independence as well as its powers” over the public sector banks and “expanding other financial regulators’ resources”, the IMF said.

The government has been urging the central bank to cut interest rates to encourage investment.

The bank has been reluctant to do so, fearing that reducing rates -- already at a seven-year low of 6% -- could stoke inflation.

India’s trouble with its sour debt hit national headlines last year when beer and airline tycoon Vijay Mallya fled to the UK to avoid paying nearly $1 billion in loans he owed banks.

In May, the government gave the central bank greater powers to intervene in cases of bad loans, and to order lenders to deal with their debts under bankruptcy laws.

In October it announced a $32 billion recapitalisation plan for state-owned banks to help them clean up their books and revive investment as India’s $2 trillion economy slowed.

The IMF welcomed these steps but urged India to go further to improve the governance of public banks and avoid a future mounting of stressed assets.

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