Banking reforms
should target ethics and governance
Dr B Yerram Raju and Vikas Singh
02 May 2017 14
02 May 2017 14
The Reserve Bank of
India (RBI) has put four banks on its critical watch list and warned another
ten to spruce up their capital. What prompted the RBI to do this is anybody’s
guess. Both the warning and action are sorely needed.
Huge bank frauds
are reported, many of them from public sector banks (PSBs). An analysis of both
frauds and the increasing non-performing assets (NPAs) suggests that the
attention of banks to their basic functions of deposit and credit has
diminished in the wake of their search for non-banking products like mutual
funds and insurance, which offer hefty commissions to all cadres of officers.
Neither the PJ
Nayak Committee’s suggested governance reforms, leading to the setting up of
the Bank Board Bureau (BBB) for selection of directors and chairpersons, nor
Indra Dhanush seem to have improved the governance of banks. There is deep
erosion in values and governance, in PSBs in particular and the Indian
financial system in general.