The Government ordinance to empower Reserve Bank of India to supervise the
Urban Co-operative Banks and the passing of Banking Regulation Amendment Bill
enabling RBI to regulate and supervise co-operative banks are a welcome step in
the right direction so that they have a control over the affairs and performance
and particularly the lending portfolios of the Urban Co-operative Banks. Many of
them are already under RBI watch list with some of them under moratorium also.
In this connection Supreme Court of India judgment under
Civil
Appellate/Original Jurisdiction Civil Appeal NO. 5674 OF 2009 in the matter
of
Pandurang Ganpati Chaugule Versus Vishwasrao Patil Murgud Sahakari
Bank Limited and many other such Civil Petitions filed between 2009 to 2020
delivered on 05.05.2020 by 5 judges’ bench may be referred. The operative part
of the judgment pertaining to status of urban co-operative banks and multi-state
co-operative banks as far as Banking Regulations Act and the entitlement of
Co-operative banks to make use of the provisions of SARFAESI Act for the
recovery of bank dues are as follows.
(2) The co-operative banks involved in the activities related to banking are
covered within the meaning of
Banking Company defined under Section 5(c)
read with Section 56(a) of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949, which is a
legislation relatable to Entry 45 of List I.
It governs the aspect of
banking of co-operative banks run by the
co-operative societies. The co-operative banks cannot carry on any activity
without compliance of the provisions of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 and any
other legislation applicable to such banks relatable to
Banking in Entry
45 of List I and the RBI Act relatable to Entry 38 of List I of the Seventh
Schedule of the Constitution of India.
(3)(a) The co-operative banks under the State legislation and multi-state
co-operative banks are
banks under section 2(1)(c) of Securitisation and
Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act,
2002. The recovery is an essential part of banking; as such, the recovery
procedure prescribed under section 13 of the SARFAESI Act, a legislation
relatable to Entry 45 List I of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution of
India, is applicable.
(3)(b) The Parliament has legislative competence under Entry 45 of List I of the
Seventh Schedule of the Constitution of India to provide additional procedures
for recovery under section 13 of the Securitisation and Reconstruction of
Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002 with respect to
co¬ operative banks. The provisions of Section 2(1)(c)(iva), of Securitisation
and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act,
2002, adding
ex abundanti cautela, ‘a multi-state co-operative bank’ is
not ultra vires as well as the notification dated 28.1.2003 issued with respect
to the co¬ operative banks registered under the State legislation. The civil
appeals, writ petitions and the pending applications, if any, are disposed of
accordingly.
The co-operative banks run by the co-operative societies registered under the
State legislation with respect to the aspects of 'incorporation, regulation and
winding up', in particular, with respect to the matters which are outside the
purview of Entry 45 of List I of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution of
India, are governed by the said legislation relatable to Entry 32 of List II of
the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution of India and hence, RBI could not
exercise effective control over them. Besides, State Government are reluctant to
dilute their control and allow RBI to exert their regulatory powers.
Many of the urban co-operative banks are under the control of politicians and
certain vested interest people with the result they completely lack good
governance, financial discipline, effective credit monitoring and prudential
norms applicable to lending by commercial banks. The knowledge about law and
practice of banking is very much limited among all category of employees from
top to bottom. The many bank failures among the co-operative banks has created a
crisis of confidence and faith among the public because of which the market
share of co-operative banks shows a sharp decline.
With the induction of RBI regulatory powers applicable to urban co-operative
banks also, it is expected that the Apex Bank would introduce latest technology
and particularly to beef up its supervising wing and deploy smart technology to
strengthen oversight.
Artificial Intelligence-enabled monitoring of transactions will allow the
supervisor to see patterns of interconnected transactions among multiple banks
and shadow banks that today escape scrutiny.
By introducing core banking solutions, enhancing robust professionalism,
improving good governance, introducing effective credit monitoring, supervision
and also a strong and healthy audit system, these urban co-operative banks could
bring back the confidence and trust of the public back to improve their
dwindling market share.
The success and performance of urban co-operative banks depend not only on the
introduction of technology but the quality of human resources. The economic
results are produced not by machines and technology but people behind the
machines and technology coupled with quality of leadership.
Hence, it is imperative that steps are to be taken to re-engineer the entire
human resources including the Board of Directors governing the co-operative
banks with delegated powers and monitoring systems as prevailing among the
commercial banks and they should be made accountable and responsible to the
customers, shareholders, stake holders, RBI and the government.
Till now Reserve Bank of India has been issuing notifications and circulars
addressed to commercial banks and urban co-operative banks separately which
created a doubt whether multi-state co-operative banks and urban co-operative
banks are coming under the purview of Banking Regulation Act.
With the introduction of the ordinance bringing the urban co-operative banks and
multi-state co-operative banks under the purview of Banking Regulation Act to be
implemented through RBI, henceforth RBI need issue notifications and circulars
through common circulars addressing to commercial banks, multi-state
co-operative banks and urban co-operative banks instead of separate
notifications and circulars. It is expected that bringing the urban co-operative
banks under the RBI supervision and the Banking Regulation Act would usher in a
dynamic paradigm change in the working of Co-operative banks.
Written By: R. Radhakrishnan
Email
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