Commentary / Ashok Mitra
Governments fight shy of bringing loan defaulters to book because it goes against class interests
It is, do we need any convincing, a class biased system;
the bias does not undergo any transformation whatever the political colour
of the regime. Some of the scoundrels who make a habit of stealing
public money may get caught. They may be locked up, or resign
from the positions they were holding. Their replacements will
not behave any differently though. The following narration may
not entertain, but it will at least provide some enlightenment.
A dozen finance ministers and governors of the Reserve Bank of
India have succeeded one another, in the North Block and Mint
Road respectively, over the past five decades. They have, however,
constituted a remarkably homogeneous mass; the dramatis personae
have changed, the message of the drama has not. The banks, wise
men have agreed in all seasons and under all regimes, must reduce
the proportion of their non-performing assets.
There has also
been unanimity of view that the parties responsible for burgeoning
non-performing assets which have done in many banks, have to be
identified and stern measures taken against them.
Successive finance
ministries and RBI governors have nonetheless been extraordinarily
coy the moment they have been cross examined on the factors underlying
the poor state of affairs in the banks and the actual measures
they proposed to undertake to improve the situation.
Alibis for non-action have never been in short supply. One particular
alibi has been in much prominence in recent years. What can the
poor bank management do, the non-performance of their assets is
casually linked to the large scale, often thoughtless expansion
in rural lending during the past quarter of a century; the rate
of recovery has supposedly been horrendously low for farm sector
loans.
The tendency not to return borrowed funds, it has been
freely alleged, has received further boost from activities of
politicians in search of rural vote banks. They have been instrumental
in periodical write offs of advances to the peasantry and other
such riffraff in society. The ethos of this species of politicians
has been contagious, and spawned the practice of non-payment of
bank dues on the part of all and sundry.
Truth has a way of revealing itself, but only in part. Successive
finance ministers and RBI governors have been reluctant to furnish
separately details of the total quantum of money owned to the
banks by the rural community and the outstanding amount of loans
not repaid on schedule -- or not paid at all --- by distinguished
corporate bodies and the equally distinguished business and industry
personalities presiding over these bodies.
Comparisons have been
described as odious, perhaps because comparisons in this particular
matter will have established the point that successive finance
ministers and resented facts. Bad debts run up by parties belonging
to the industrial and commercial sector are many times more in
magnitude than loans not recovered from the agrarian community.
An additional bit of interesting datum pertains to the class character
of habitual loan defaulters in rural areas. It is mostly big farmers
and rich peasants who do not bother to pay back bank loans; they
have political clout to fall back upon. The poor, on the other
hand, have no such security cover the rate of loan recovery from
them is way above the national average.
One has to ferret out such information; the composition of the
non-performing assets of the banks has generally been kept as
a closely guarded secret. In a moment of weakness, a couple of
years ago or thereabouts, the RBI got prepared a report on the
aggregate amount of bank money locked up in 'sticky'
accounts in the name of well known corporate entries and/or persons
closely associated with these entities.
Loans amounting to Rs 10 million and above not returned by such
entities and persons added up to, according to the RBI report,
Rs 370 billion. This was however the situation that obtained in
1993. The quantum of outstanding debt not recovered by the banks
might have, for all one knows, by now climbed to the figure of
Rs 500 billion or even more.
The RBI did indeed prepare such a report, but it is still under
wraps -- the public has been denied the privilege of knowing its
details. The crooks, who cheat society, are our honoured citizens.
They enjoy, at taxpayers' expense, Z or A or B category security
cover. If they or the firms they preside over have made a habit
of not repaying bank loans, the establishment regards it as obligatory
to hide the fact from the people.
These loan defaulters constitute
the creme de la creme of society; it is not the done thing to
disclose the information that they have walked away with public
funds totalling Rs 500 billion or more. Whether it is the Central
Bureau of Investigation or the RBI, the behavioural norms are,
after all, the same.
Persistent attempts on the part of members of Parliament to have
the RBI report laid on the floor of the House have met with non-success.
The ministry of finance has fallen back on the hackneyed plea
of statutory confidentiality of individual bank accounts which
seemingly prevents the government from publishing the names of
the loan defaulters. These archaic statutes were once written
into our banking code by the British to serve honest imperial
purposes, there is little reason why the colonial hangover cannot
be got rid of.
Responding to the crescendo of public demand, the authorities
in our neighbouring country, Pakistan, suspended, some years ago,
the secrecy provisions and revealed the names of the celebrities
who owed the banks huge sums of money over there. But the class
instincts are evidently stronger in India than in Pakistan.
Had this sum of Rs 500 billion or thereabouts been recovered by
some means by the banks, a dramatic transformation could have
occurred in their overall operational performance. The ministry
of finance and the RBI, commonsense suggests, must not spare any
effort to recover these loans. The individuals associated with
the direction and management of the corporate bodies which borrowed
the huge sums involved do not subsist below the poverty line;
the government's conscience should not be bothered in case a massive
operation loan recovery were launched against them.
One lives to learn. Cross over to the Rajya Sabha, September 10,
1196 answer laid on the table in response to unstarred question
number 3620. The question was a straightforward one; it intended
to find out whether any penal action is proposed to be taken against
the habitual loan defaulters listed in the RBI report.
Three separate enquiries were addressed to the finance minister:
will he be pleased to state, one, 'whether the government
proposes to ask the banks to call back, within a specified period,
any outstanding long term or working capital loans to the defaulting
parties'; two, 'whether the Securities and Exchange
Board of India would be asked to disallow any public issues or
shares or bonds by the defaulting companies and other companies
in which the promoters or executive directors of the defaulting
companies happen to be directors'; and three, 'whether
the government contemplates to issue directives to SEBI to delist
from the stock exchanges shares of the defaulting groups of companies
unless the institutional dues are cleared within a reasonable time.'
Three short enquiries: Whether the government, which has various
means as its disposal, proposed to apply any of these means in
order to bring pressure on the loan defaulters so that public
money is returned to where such money belonged. Please hold your
breath. The following is the reply, verbatim, and in full, tabled
in the Rajya Sabha on September 10 last in response to unstarred
question number 3620: 'The information is being collected
from the RBI and will be laid on the table of the House to the
extent permissible under the rules.'
There can be only one interpretation of what the ministry of finance
is trying to say. The government is seeking information from the
RBI whether it -- the government -- proposes to institute the
measures against defaulting parties of the nature referred to
under three sections of the question; the government will oblige
Parliament with the information whether it will proceed with the
measures suggested in unstarred question number 3620 only after
the RBI informs it -- that is, the government -- what its -- that
is, the government -- what its -- that is, the government's -- views
are.
No, please do not rush to the wrong conclusion. Morons have not
taken over the ministry of finance. The answer tabled is merely
one of several last ditch battles on behalf of the class fraternity.
Cheats who have stolen public money are soul brothers of those
who guard the corridors of power in New Delhi's South and North
Blocks. The answer provided to unstarred question number 3620
in the Rajya Sabha on September 10 last in an echo of the same
instinct which persuades the present prime minister to continue
to pay his respects to a predecessor of his currently undergoing
criminal prosecution under section 420 of the Indian Penal Code.
Blood has always been thicker than any other liquid substances
in a class ridden society.
Ashok Mitra, columnist, economist, former West Bengal finance minister and Marxist MP, will contribute a weekly column to these pages.
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