The recommendations of the Report of the Narasimham Committee on the Financial
System 1991 introduced financial sector reforms in India and the aim was to put
the accounting system in place. Post these reforms, the grave problem of
non-performing assets came into the limelight since the report reckoned its
consequences for the commercial banks. Especially, during the period of strong
growth and over-optimism in the economy i.e. during 2006-2008, banks started
making mistakes by extrapolating previous growths and performance of the future,
and thus originated the bad loans.[1]
The most heatedly discussed issue of the
Indian Banking Industry is that of bad loans or Non- Performing. But, what are
these Non- Performing Assets that have become a paramount subject of scrutiny?
When banks give loans or advances to the borrowers and as per the performance of
these loans, they are classified as a standard asset or a non-performing asset (NPA).
A standard asset is the one where the borrower repays regularly, whereas an NPA
is a loan or an advance for which the principal amount or the interest payment
remained overdue for a specified period.
According to the Securitization and
Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act,
2002, the account of the borrower who defaults in the payment of the debt or any
other interest to any secured creditor is classified as NPA in the books of
account.[2] This classification is made, in the case when the bank or financial
institution is regulated or administered by any authority or body established,
constituted, or appointed by any law for the time being in force, in accordance
with the directions or guidelines relating to assets classifications issued by
such authority or body; and in any other case, in accordance with the directions
or guidelines relating to assets classifications issued by the Reserve
Bank.[3]
This issue reflects the poor performance of the banking sector which is
a prudential indicator of a robust economic scenario. This article discusses the
factors causative of NPA accounts creation and how this issue is tackled in
India.
Factors Responsible For Npa Creation
As in contradiction to the general perception, there is a lot more to the
existence of NPAs than just the fact that the unscrupulous borrowers cause NPA
creation. Where a loan acts as an asset for the bank as its the repayment of
principal amount and interest payments create a flow of cash; it gets
transformed into an NPA when it ceases raising income in the form of interest,
commission, fees, or any other dues for the bank.
As far as the figures of NPAs
are concerned, they have increased from 38385 crores in 1995 to 71047 crores in
2011 in the public sector, and from 6410 crores in 1995 to 17972 crores in
2011.[4] The factors of growing NPAs can be internal or external. One of the
studies conducted by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in which it examined 800
NPA accounts in 17 banks, revealed certain reasons behind increasing NPAs, and
found that the internal factors outweighed the external ones.[5]
The internal factors are in the banks’ control and include improper lending
decision or flawed lending processes like non-compliance with the principles of
safety, profitability and safety; deficiencies pertinent to product/ marketing,
etc; inefficient management; unsuitable technology causing technical troubles;
tense relationship amongst the labour; inappropriate SWOT analysis; managerial
shortcomings; lack of proper credit appraisal system; fund diversion; the
process of re-loaning; etc.[6]
On the other hand, the external factors, also the non-controllable factors, are
effete statutory recovery procedures; changes in policies formulated by the
Government like export-import duties; natural disasters; willful defaults; the
macro environment changes like recession; poor demand; industrial sickness;
etc.[7]
The instance of Bhushan Steel Ltd. represents how a flourishing company can
become one of the biggest loan defaulters worth thousands of crores, hence
strangling the banking system. The promoters of Bhushan Steel blamed
insufficient regulation, global recession, and sheer misfortune for its NPA
crisis, however, the striking rise and fall of the company unveil that the
crisis is equally the consequence of public sector banks supporting risky bets
of promoters wonted to developing their businesses on borrowed money.[8]
Addressing The NPA Muddle
For the NPA level is considered as an important evaluator of growth
and performance of the financial sector and driver of financial stability in the
economy, it becomes vital to have an appropriate credit assessment system and
risk management mechanism in place to obviate economic contraction caused by NPA.
Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) 2016 came forth as a convincing solution to
the problem of stressed assets. The code seeks rigidly accurate time-bound
initiation of corrective measures even at the level of the primary default
either to the business counterparties or to the banks.[9]
The IBC aims at
accomplishing the state of speedy resolution and high recoveries, and with time
boost the lenders for higher levels of debt financing. It is noteworthy that the
success of the code requires agility in the responsiveness of the Insolvency and
Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI), insolvency professionals, government,
tribunals, and courts for nipping the issue in the bud. The recent IBC Ordinance
prevents the promoters from bidding for their own companies if they do not first
clear their stressed assets.[10]
The ordinance brought section 29A that makes
certain persons like willful defaulters ineligible as a resolution applicant
under the Resolution Applicants in the Corporate Insolvency Resolution
Process.[11]
The Banking Regulation (Amendment) Ordinance promulgated in 2017
incorporated the provisions in the Banking Regulation Act 1949 to deal with the
stressed asset related issues.[12] It invests the authority in RBI to issue
directions to banks aimed at resolving the bad assets. RBI also has the power to
specify the committees or authorities for this process and the members for the
same are appointed by the central bank itself.
Also, the Prudential Framework
2019 formulated by RBI, post the failure of the Prior Framework which was struck
down in the case of
Dharani Sugars and Chemicals Limited v. Union of India[13],
provides for the mandatory obligation of the lenders to review all accounts for
a period of 30 days from the date of default during when they may decide a
resolution plan. The lenders also need to sign an inter-creditor agreement, and
after the expiry of the Review Period, they have 180 days to execute a
resolution strategy.[14]
Furthermore, the SARFAESI Act 2002, enacted to assist banks and other
financial institutions in the recovery of NPAs without court intervention,
provides two methods for the same.[15] The institution either can take the
possession of borrower’s secured assets along with the right to assign, sell or
lease them or can take the business’s management into its own hands until the
recovery happens. The act also empowers the financial institutions to sell the
financial assets to Asset Reconstruction Companies (ARCs) according to the
directions and guidelines issued by RBI. But, the recovery of amount under this
act was found to be approximately 14.5% by the Economic Survey, which is way low
in comparison to the IBC that exponentially rose the recovery rate.[16]
In addition, in the wake of consuming impacts of unprecedented times
of COVID- 19 pandemic on the Indian Financial System, making it weak by
approximate $140 billion of bad loans, and liquidity crisis at the shadow banks,
the plan of creating a new structure of bad banks has been announced to resolve
the surging problem of NPAs.
Bad Bank is basically an ARC or AMC (Asset
Management Company) that functions as a bank but by taking over the bad loans of
the commercial banks, managing them and finally recovering the due amount over a
period of time. [17] The bank is facilitating quicken the debt restructuring
process since it reduces the number of lenders who must agree to a purported
deal. If it is a nonintegrated entity, it can also allow a bank for stemming
losses, protecting depositors and cleaning up its balancing sheet.[18]
Conclusion
To conclude, the NPAs cripple the stream of cash flow of the banking system and
stunt its growth and profitability. Hence, it calls for diligence and
cautiousness on the part of banks and financial institutions instead of
over-ebullience in increasing lending and compromising the quality of assets. An
appropriate and reliable credit assessment and risk management system with
pre-emptive strategies is requisite. Simultaneously, it is pivotal to raise
awareness about how NPA is the root cause of financial indiscipline.
End-Notes:
- Raghuram Rajan Explains the Origins of India’s NPA Crisis, The Wire,
https://thewire.in/banking/raghuram-rajan-npa-parliamentary-committee-modi-government
(last visited May 12, 2021
- Sec. 2 (f) (i), SARFFAESI Act 2002
- Sec. 2 (o), SARFAESI Act 2002
- Vivek Rajbahadur Singh, A Study of Non-Performing Assets of Commercial
Banks and its a recovery in India, 4 16 (2016).
- 2 - Causes and Consequences of NPA | Capital Requirement | Banks, Scribd,
https://www.scribd.com/doc/58757831/2-Causes-and-Consequences-of-NPA (last
visited May 13, 2021).
- Sikdar - ROLE OF NON PERFORMING ASSETS IN THE RISK FRAMEWOR.pdf,
https://apps.aima.in/ejournal_new/articlesPDF/PallabSikdar.pdf (last visited
May 13, 2021).
- Id
- NPA crisis: The rise and fall of Bhushan Steel into the great Indian
debt trap, Hindustan Times (2017), https://www.hindustantimes.com/business-news/npa-crisis-the-rise-and-fall-of-bhushan-steel-in-the-great-indian-debt-trap/story-GHrvRRFIBsMLXKJzbqvaFN.html
(last visited May 13, 2021).
- Ashwini Mehra, Will Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code fix the Bank NPA
issue?, mint (2018), https://www.livemint.com/Opinion/wfkP8ghPzUctlcYt8h6z7N/Will-Insolvency-and-Bankruptcy-Code-fix-the-Bank-NPA-issue.html
(last visited May 13, 2021).
- IBC may end NPAs problem, but won’t help banks get their money back,
https://www.businesstoday.in/opinion/prosaic-view/npa-nclt-reserve-bank-of-india-liquidation-banks-ibc-process/story/265782.html
(last visited May 13, 2021).
- Shivangi Pathak & Aherar Patel, Critical Analysis of Section 29A of the
Code, IBC Laws (2020), https://ibclaw.in/critical-analysis-of-section-29a-of-the-code/
(last visited May 13, 2021).
- The Banking Regulation (Amendment) Ordinance, 2017, PRS Legislative
Research, https://prsindia.org/billtrack/the-banking-regulation-amendment-ordinance-2017
(last visited May 13, 2021).
- Dharani Sugars and Chemicals Limited v. Union of India, SC Civil
Original/Appellate Jurisdiction Transferred Case (Civil) No.66 Of 2018 In
Transfer Petition (Civil) No.1399 OF 2018
- Resolution Of Stressed Assets - RBI’s New Framework -
Insolvency/Bankruptcy/Re-structuring - India, , https://www.mondaq.com/india/insolvencybankruptcy/863070/resolution-of-stressed-assets--rbi39s-new-framework
(last visited May 13, 2021
- Suravi Mohapatra Says, Overview of SARFAESI Act 2002 & Note on the
process of Enforcement of Security Interest under Section 13, TaxGuru,
https://taxguru.in/corporate-law/overview-sarfaesi-act-2002-note-process-enforcement-security-interest-section-13.html
(last visited May 13, 2021).
- I. B. C. Laws, Resolution of Stressed Assets amid suspension of
Insolvency Laws- “A shot in the dark” - By Saurabh Goswami and Adv. Kanhaiya
Maheshwari, IBC Laws (2020), https://ibclaw.in/resolution-of-stressed-assets-amid-suspension-of-insolvency-laws-a-shot-in-the-dark-by-saurabh-goswami-and-adv-kanhaiya-maheshwari/
(last visited May 13, 2021).
- Explained: The arguments for and against a bad bank, The Indian Express
(2021), https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/npa-bad-bank-balance-sheet-loan-rbi-shaktikanta-das-7151841/
(last visited May 13, 2021).
- How India Finally Got Around to Starting a ‘Bad Bank,’ Bloomberg.com,
February 4, 2021, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-02-04/how-india-finally-got-around-to-starting-a-bad-bank-quicktake
(last visited May 13, 2021).
Written By:
- Navin Kumar Jaggi
- Vanshika Mehra
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