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Interview |Bank privatization will reduce long-term loan exposure, says former chief statistician

Instead of privatization, the government should immediately implement a European model in India that will allow banks to raise money in the capital markets for lending purposes, says Pronab Sen

August 25, 2022 / 16:13 IST
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Asked about bank privatization, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Shaktikanta Das said in a recent interview that the central bank was ownership-neutral. An article published in the RBI bulletin this month suggested that a big bang approach to privatisation of government-owned banks may do more harm than good. Public sector banks have better than private sector counterparts on counts such as financial inclusion and have a sounder credit system, the article said.

Fomer chief statistician Pronab Sen, in an exclusive interview to Moneycontrol on August 25, spoke about how privatization would affect the banking model in India. Edited excerpts:

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Why do you think there is such a massive asset-liability mismatch in the Indian banking system? Will bank privatization worsen it? 

Due to the backing of the government, public sector banks can take risks that private banks cannot afford to take. The long-term loans of the private banks are very small so they keep their asset-liability position in some sort of balance, essentially by focusing on working capital and other short-term loans. For large investment projects, most of them (loans) are carried by public sector banks. Private sectors banks are not going to allow such asset-liability mismatches; they will start reducing long-term loan exposure. Privatization will run the risk of having insufficient funds for such capital investments. The reason this is happening is because we closed the development financial institutions like IDBI (Industrial Development Bank of India), IRBI (Industrial Reconstruction Bank of India) that would give long-term loans.