HomeNewsBusinessEconomyHow dual regulation is worsening the mess at India’s opaquely run co-operative banks

How dual regulation is worsening the mess at India’s opaquely run co-operative banks

To save India’s broken co-operative banks waiting to implode, current laws needs to be changed to give the power of regulation to a single regulator; the RBI is most suited for the job.

January 20, 2020 / 15:25 IST
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India’s problematic co-operative banks may have more skeletons in the closets, waiting to tumble out. For nearly two years, there has been no proper scrutiny of the accounts of many cooperative banks, including Urban Co-operative Banks (UCBs), due to dual regulation and political involvement at state-level.

“You have a problem when you don’t have clarity on who does what and you are unwilling to own up mistakes when things go wrong. Too many cooks spoil the broth,” said an RBI official on condition of anonymity. Regulation of UCBs is split between RBI and centre/state-governments, while that of smaller co-operative banks is divided between National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (Nabard) and state governments.

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The regulation of multi-state UCBs fall under Ministry of agriculture while that of single-state UCBs come under the ministry of finance. Punjab and Maharashtra Cooperative bank (PMC) is a multi-state co-operative bank. This is the reason why Union finance minister, Nirmala Sitharaman, in a recent tweet, passed the responsibility to the RBI saying multi state co-operative institutions do not come under ministry of finance even if they are called banks. The RBI is the regulator and they are taking action, the FM had said. But, the central bank may not fully agree with her view.

RBI or government?