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   LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Thursday, November 01, 2001 

Ruing the RoC ruckus
Your editorial ‘RoC ruckus’ (Oct 30) has not come a day too soon. The state of affairs at the Delhi RoC has been terrible since a very long time. I have personally experienced it, as a practising chartered accountant. Nothing moves without gratification. You cannot get your name application approved without approaching the RoC for obvious reasons.
In the name of amendments in memorandum etc, one has to come across the ubiquitous babu. Even a simple task of revalidation of a transfer deed can be harassing to no end, if you leave it to be done on its merits and as per the rule book. It is high time that such government departments are exposed before the public and this government whose head proclaims that his government shall be sensitive and responsive to the general public.
— Raj Kumar Goel, on e-mail


Woes of PSBs
AS reported in The Financial Express dated October 13, the finance minister has exhorted public sector banks to come up with innovative schemes, such as Citibank’s Suvidha, and not rely on size alone. Indeed, size does not matter. The sooner our PSBs realise what’s good for them and the economy, the better it would be for us all.
At present PSBs are burdened with huge staff costs and non-performing assets. Worse still, the companies to which they may be interested in extending advances are not interested, because of the higher cost of loans as well as latent expenses. The PSBs’ behaviour vis-a-vis prospective and actual borrowers must improve.
— R L Bhasin, on e-mail

Universal banks
Universal banking comes in handy for financial institutions in the cover up of their loan and investment losses, not in tackling the real problems on account of which their financial positions have deteriorated. If after more than four decades of existence these institutions have been unable to hold their own, despite enjoying tremendous pull with top industrial houses, it is unlikely that any meaningful purpose would be served in their becoming universal banks, that too through the reverse merger route.
At the most, the move may end up camouflaging the bad loans and past sins of FIs and pulling down the well-performing banks. Instead of the subsidiary lifting the parent and boosting its scale of operations, the parent company is pulling down its outfit along with it.
FIs should have been able to present a healthy picture of their financial standing which would have enabled them to absorb at least their own outfits. Now, well-performing banks will be made to subsidise mismanaged FIs. It is painful to note that FIs which have not been able to manage large volumes of loan assets are trying to become universal banks to handle still larger volumes and diversified business transactions. Isn’t the whole always bigger than the sum of its parts?
What is the guarantee that universal banks would perform better. The ideal situation would have been to clean up the FIs’ balance sheets before attempting to merge with or take over large banks. Universal banking should not be allowed to enable FIs to shove their problems under the carpet. This should be made clear by the Reserve Bank to the FIs.
— R S Raghavan, on e-mail
 
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