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New
private banks get 2-3 year breather for priority loans
Ujjal
K Basu Roy
Mumbai, June 15: The Reserve Bank
of India (RBI) has given new generation private-sector banks
a breather of two to three years to meet their priority-sector
lending target of 40 per cent.
Further, the central bank has also exhorted private banks
to shore up their priority-sector lending by doing so directly,
less through investments in the bond offerings of the National
Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD), Small
Industries Development Bank of India (SIDBI) or by parking
the shortfall in rural infrastructure development fund (RIDF).
Sources said that the decision followed a meeting that representatives
of private banks had with the RBI at which these banks --
old and new -- were asked not only to shore up such lendings,
but a few -- the newer ones -- were also given additional
time of two to three years to reach the target.
The new generation private banks made presentations to the
effect that given their recent vintage, it might take them
time to achieve the priority-sector lending targets as they
do not have a network of branches in rural areas.
Some of these banks are close to achieving the 40 per cent
target, but most of the banks have a lot of ground to cover
before they reach the mark.
Priority-sector advances of most of these banks are hovering
around the 25 per cent to 30 per cent mark though a few are
close to 40 per cent. It has been gathered that 30 per cent
would be the median-target to be achieved by the private-sector
banks for the moment.
One or two of the older south-based private sector banks have
achieved the target. Officials in the newer private sector
banks admit that there is an appreciable gap between the target
and their current levels.
Said a top official at a private-sector bank: "The step
to increase direct lending to the priority sector is a slightly
regressive step.
There are more pragmatic ways of doing the same. Priority-sector
lending is an area where we have no expertise or no rural
branches for that matter. We will have to hire people with
skills in credit-assessment and other areas as we do not know
the sector".
Banks have to lend 40 per cent of their total advances to
the priority-sector. Such lendings include sub-segments like
agriculture, small-scale industries, transport operators and
education. They can do so either by lending directly or by
proxy. Private-sector banks are more compliant in the latter
sense, but the RBI now wants them to do so more by way of
direct-lending.
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