It has been known for some time now
that India's banking system is burdened with a huge volume
of non-performing assets (NPAs), or loans on which
borrowers have defaulted on interest and amortization of
payments. What is noteworthy is that much of the NPA
burden was accumulated during the years of reform.
According to one estimate, NPAs in India's banks rose from
Rs 37,500 crore at the end of financial year 1991–92 to Rs
1,10,000 crore at the end of 2001–02. Given their
importance within the banking system, the public sector
banks were major contributors to NPAs in the system. At
the end of financial year 2002, the accumulated NPAs of
twenty-seven public sector banks totalled Rs 56,000 crore.
The distribution of these NPAs was skewed in favour of big
borrowers, since large borrowers with 11,000 individual
accounts accounted for as much as Rs 40,000 crore of total
bad debt. Among public sector banks too high-value
defaults involving 1,741 accounts over Rs 5 crore amounted
to Rs 22,866 crore or 40 per cent of the total. Though
this concentration of bad debt among large borrowers
should have made recovery easier, the actual record of
recovery has been extremely poor. An assessment conducted
by the All India Bank Officers' Association (AIBOA) in
December 2002 indicated that less than Rs 5,000 crore of
bad debt had been recovered during the preceding eight
years.
This record of poor recovery came to light when the NPA
burden of the banking system was receiving considerable
attention, since as part of the ongoing financial reform
process banks were required to deal with their NPA legacy
and set right their books in order to meet more stringent
capital adequacy norms and rules of accounting. Bad debts
were being used to pillory the public sector banks and
justify privatization, though large private players with
payment defaults were responsible for the state of the
banks and it was clear that privatization would be
feasible only if these liabilities were dealt with or
written off altogether.
Among the many routes that were pursued to deal with the
accumulating bad debt legacy, there were some that
received special attention. The first and most obvious
route was to restructure existing loans so as to reduce
the burden of payments and extend the deadline faced by
borrowers so that they could revive themselves. Such
restructuring involves some temporary sacrifice on the
part of the banks aimed at encouraging revival of the
afflicted unit. According to one estimate, by the end of
March 2002 banks had restructured assets to the tune of Rs
7,000 crore.
The second was to set aside potential profits as
provisions for bad assets. Banks have only gone part of
the way in this direction. The cumulative provisions
against loan losses of the public sector banks worked out
to 42.5 per cent of the gross NPAs for the year that ended
on 31 March 2002 while international norms are as high as
140 per cent.
The third was infusion of capital by the government into
the public sector banks. It is estimated that the
government had already injected a massive Rs 20,446 crore
towards recapitalization of public sector banks (PSBs)
till end-March 1999 to help them fulfil the new capital
adequacy norms. More recently the S.P. Talwar and Verma
committees set up by the finance ministry had recommended
a two-stage capitalization for three weak banks (Indian
Bank, United Bank of India and United Commercial Bank)
involving infusion of a total of Rs 2,300 crore for
shoring up their capital adequacy ratios. Similar infusion
arrangements have been underway in the case of financial
institutions like the IDBI and IFCI and in bailing out of
UTI, involving large sums of tax-payers' money.
Finally, there are efforts to retrieve as much of these
assets as possible from defaulting clients, either by
directly attaching the borrowers' assets and liquidating
them to recover dues or by transferring NPAs to
specialized asset reconstruction or asset management
companies. The government tried to facilitate recovery
through this route with an ordinance issued in June 2002,
which was subsequently replaced by the Securitization and
Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of
Security Interest Bill passed in November 2002.
The Ordinance and the Bill were aimed at restructuring the
framework of debt workouts in favour of lenders and
against the borrowers. Prior to the introduction of the
ordinance and passage of the Bill the legal framework was
biased against efforts by lenders to enforce contracts and
recover legitimate dues. Further, the ability of companies
to use the provisions of the Sick Industrial Companies Act
1985 (SICA) and the option to turn to the Board for
Industrial and Financial Reconstruction (BIFR), helped
them keep lenders at bay despite default. SICA provides
that all other litigation against companies whose cases
are being considered by the board would cease pending a
settlement, encouraging defaulting companies to approach
the BIFR to sidestep creditors.
The Ordinance and the Bill enable secured creditors to
issue, without the intervention of any court or tribunal,
a 60-day notice requesting settlement of dues. If the
borrower does not comply the secured creditor can resort
to any one or a combination of the following: (i) take
possession of the secured assets of the borrower,
including the right to transfer by way of lease,
assignment or sale for realizing the secured asset; (ii)
appoint any person to manage the secured asset; and (iii)
require at any time by notice in writing, from any person
who has acquired any of the secured assets from the
borrower and from whom any money is due or may become due
to the borrower, to pay the secured creditor, as much as
the amount that is sufficient to pay the secured debt. All
that is required is that creditors accounting for 75 per
cent or more of the secured lending should agree to
initiate recovery proceedings.
While the borrowers are allowed to seek protection from
secured creditors by filing an appeal to the Debt Recovery
Tribunals (DRTs), they will also be required to deposit
with the tribunal 75 per cent of the amount claimed by the
creditors in order to prevent misuse of appeal provisions.
The DRTs can, at its discretion, reduce the deposit
amount, but only after citing its reasons for doing so.
Even the BIFR route does not provide much protection to
borrowers since the Bill allows lenders to seek abatement
of cases pending before the BIFR so that they can proceed
with action against default as specified in the Bill. The
importance of this provision can be gauged from the fact
that high-value non-performing assets (those above Rs 5
crore) accumulated with firms, involved in 603 cases
pending at the board, amounted to Rs 8,163 crore as on 31
March 2002, while another Rs 1,905 crore were locked up in
cases where rehabilitation was in progress.
One issue that remained even after providing lenders with
these sweeping powers was the modalities concerning the
management of the secured assets, since the banks may not
have the competence or resources to either liquidate or
manage these assets. The Securitization Bill provides an
answer to this as well. It provides for the creation of
asset reconstruction/management companies, to whom
creditors can transfer their assets either in return for
securities carrying terms mutually agreed upon or for an
appropriate fee in order to realize dues in part or in
full. The assets reconstruction/management company can
take on responsibility for the management of the business
of the borrower, by intervening in the management of the
borrower's business; can sell or lease a part or whole of
the business of the borrower; reschedule the payment of
debts payable by the borrower; and settle dues payable by
the borrower. It can also act as a mere agent for any bank
or financial institution for the purposes of recovering
their dues from the borrower or for managing the secured
assets.
The RBI and the banks clearly saw the Bill as a threat to
force habitual defaulters to behave. This was obvious from
the fact that the RBI introduced for short periods of time
a 'one-time settlement (OTS) system' aimed at giving
defaulters a negotiated way out of the trap. Under the OTS
defaulters, with debt up to Rs 5 crore initially and Rs 10
crore more recently, were encouraged to enter into
discussions with the banks for ways to deal with their
debts in default. While this offer was pending, the banks
sent out recovery notices to a large number of debtors to
pressurize them into engaging in discussions with the
banks.
It should be obvious that of the above ways to deal with
the legacy of NPAs, the first three are means to let off
defaulting borrowers easily or completely. They were
either being given time to deal with a reduced-payment
burden or the cost of default was being borne partly or
wholly by the banks themselves or by the government. It
was only the fourth, involving a change in the legal
framework governing the relations between lenders and
borrowers, which involved penalties on the defaulting
borrowers.
However, it is here that the progress has been slow. By
September last year out of the total high-value defaults
of Rs 22, 866 crore with twenty-seven public sector banks,
the banks had filed recovery suits only in 816 cases
involving total NPAs of Rs 10,657 crore. There were 586
cases pending before the Board for Industrial and
Financial Reconstruction (BIFR) with total bad assets of
Rs 8,163 crore. The possibility of using the new provision
to withdraw these cases from the BIFR was only being
contemplated. Besides this, 114 cases were under
rehabilitation involving Rs 1,905 crore, while
negotiations for settlement were being held in 157 cases
involving Rs 2,769 crore. The banks were also still
considering action in the remaining 236 accounts involving
NPAs of Rs 2,847 crore. The figures relating to the
accounts in which suits had been filed include a few cases
pending before BIFR since reference to the board was made
after filing of the suit.
Because of the unwillingness of banks to exercise their
new powers, the results have indeed been poor. Speaking at
a National Conference on Economic Legislations organized
by the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and
Industry (FICCI) at the end of February 2003 , Arun
Jaitley, Union Minister for Law, Justice, Commerce and
Industry declared that financial institutions and banks
had been able to recover only 5 per cent of their bad
debts. Clearly there are strong forces at work preventing
the banks from using the sweeping powers that the
Securitisation Bill gives them to quickly clear a large
proportion of their accumulated NPAs. In fact, industry
associations and big business spokesmen have been
criticizing the Bill on the grounds that it does not
distinguish between 'wilful defaulters' and 'honest
failures'. The implication obviously is that not only
should big business in India be provided large doses of
credit to create and manage its risk-taking ventures, it
should also be insulated against all risks in the name of
'honest failure', and should be penalized only in the case
of wilful default amounting to fraud. Needless to say, the
next step would be to identify every case of possible
wilful default as an honest failure.
Clearly, the message that has gone out to the private
sector is that the new powers with which the banks have
been armed would not be used across the board. This is
clear from the response to the revised OTS scheme
announced by the RBI on 29 January in which the ceiling on
the size of accounts eligible for the scheme was raised to
Rs 10 crore and defaulters were expected to enter into
negotiations with the relevant banks by 30 April. However,
unlike the earlier scheme relating to accounts up to Rs 5
crore, the response in this instance has reportedly been
poor. Rather than launch proceedings, it appears the
government has decided to extend the scheme for a few more
months. Thus, in practice defaulters on debt to India's
banking system, which is being forced to restructure and
recapitalize, still receive kid-glove treatment. It is not
surprising therefore that little progress has been made in
redressing the huge NPA-problem that confronts the banking
system of India today.
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