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Context:
Government of India decided to merge three Public Sector Banks namely – Bank of Baroda, Vijaya Bank and Dena bank into one single entity. Though termed Bank merger it being called as bank amalgamation. The resultant entity after amalgamation will be the third largest Public Sector Bank in India after State Bank of India and Punjab National Bank.
Positives | Negatives |
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Consolidation helped in better monitoring | Combined loss of associate banks shadowed the profits of SBI in 2017-18 |
Customers were able to avail lower interest on loans | Bad loans of the associate banks can drag the performance of strong bank SBI |
increased efficiency of the consolidated bank | Officials of associate banks are upset over the change in their career prospects as a result of the merger |
Provided for better capital adequacy ratio of the consolidated entity | 20% of the branches have been closed |
Historical Background of Bank Consolidation in India:
After the wave of economic liberalization, a committee under the chairmanship of MaidavoluNarasimham (13th Governor of Reserve Bank of India (RBI) was constituted in 1991 and again in 1998 to recommend reforms required in banking sector.
Narsimhan Committee 1991 Recommendation:
Structural Reorganizations of the Banking sector :
- Actual numbers of public sector banks need to be reduced
- Recommended mergers to form a three-tier structure
- Three to four big banks including SBI should be developed as international banks
- Eight to ten banks having nationwide presence should concentrate on the national and universal banking services.
- A large number of Regional Banks focusing on agriculture and rural financing.
- No further nationalization
- Liberal entry norms for private and foreign banks
Narsimhan Committee 1998 Recommendation:
Strengthening Banks in India: It recommended the merger of strong banks which will have ‘multiplier effect’ on the industry.
Cases of Bank Mergers in India
- Punjab National Bank (PNB) and New Bank of India (NBI) (1993-1994) – first ever merger between two nationalized banks.
- Bank of Baroda (BoB) and Benares State Bank Ltd (2002) – another bailout in the form of a merger
- Oriental Bank of Commerce (OBC) and Global Trust Bank (2004) – It was proposed in order to protect the interests of the depositors of GTB. The bank had suffered massive losses and its net worth wiped off.
- State Bank of India and State Bank of Saurashtra (2008) – This was the first of the seven mergers between SBI and its associate banks. After the banking sector was opened to foreign banks in 2009, consolidation of SBI with associates was actively considered in order to increase its competency vis-à-vis entry of foreign banks.
- SBI merger with associate banks and BharatiyaMahila Bank (2017) – As the largest lender, State Bank of India was already designated a systemically important institution. It became bigger after merging five associates and the BharatiyaMahila Bank. The merger helped SBI gain a spot among the top 50 banks globally.
- Private Banks Merger – Kotak Mahindra Bank picked up ING Vyasa bank recently to increase its footprint in southern region. Similarly, ICICI bank had picked up Bank of Madura to get a rural footprint and increase its banking services.
Procedure of Merging
- Bank mergers are regulated under (Banking Regulation) Act, 1949.
- Any two public sector banking entities can initiate merger talks, but the scheme of the merger must be finalized by the government in consultation with the RBI and it must be placed in the Parliament.
- Parliament reserves the right to modify or reject the mergers.
- Alternative Mechanism Panel for PSBs merger– Recently, the government has put in place an Alternative Mechanism Panel headed by the Finance Minister to oversee merger proposal of PSBs. The other member of the panel are Railway Minister and Defence Minister.
- It is made to fast-track consolidation process to create strong lenders.
- The first proposal was the merger of Bank of Baroda, Vijaya Bank and Dena Bank.
Key | facts | about | disability | in | India | |
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• India has around 80 million people with disability. • According to the Word Bank, one in every 12 households in India has a person living with disability. |
Why go for Bank Consolidation?
- Lower return on the capital employed by the government: All the PSBs have a government sharing upward of 53.81%, they are doing same business and compete to serve similar customers. It meant a lower return on the capital employed by the government which has competing demands for funds, and growing competition.
- Reduced Recapitalisation Burden– With a larger capital base and higher liquidity, the burden on the central government to recapitalize the public sector banks again and again will come down substantially.
- Cutting Cost and Acquiring Efficiency – Several banks that are majority-owned by the government, virtually doing the same business, and competing for the same pie of customers wasn’t a sensible strategy. Since financial stability is not threatened and depositors are not running the risk of losing money (as long as the banks have government backing), the primary logic for consolidation should be cutting cost and acquiring efficiency.
There are multiple expected ways in which this can be achieved.
- Weaker bank sells its assets
- Closes loss making branches
- Entail sale of real state where branches are redundant
- Manage headcount – providing voluntary retirement schemes
- Multiple senior management posts will be abolished bringing in financial prudence.
- To increase the risk taking ability-The aim of the government is to increase the risk taking ability of the banks.Banks will not be reluctant to approve big loans to averse the risk.
- To reduce government holding-The government owns majority stakes in 21 Public Sector Banks (PSBs) virtually doing the same business and competing for the same pie of customers.
- Bad loans problem-Ever-rising NPAs have created the urgency for bank consolidation. Big banks can absorb shocks and have capacity to raise resources without depending unduly on the state exchequer.
Implications of Bank Merger
Statistics (According to Prison Statistics India, 2015 ): | |
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1. Total Prison population (including pre-trial detainees / remand prisoners) | 419623 |
2. Prison population rate (per 100,000 of national population) | 33 |
3. Detainees (percentage of prison population) | 0.672 |
4. Female prisoners (percentage of prison population) | 0.043 |
5. Foreign prisoners (percentage of prison population) | 0.015 |
6. Number of prisons | 1401 (comprising 134 central jails, 379 district jails, 741 sub jails, 18 women's jails, 63 open jails, 20 Borstal schools, 43 special jails, 3 other jails) |
7. Official capacity of prison system | 3667.81 |
8. Occupancy level | 1.144 |
Disadvantages of Bank Merger
- In India most of the merger has been a consequence of compulsions like NPA, inefficiency which has only led to failure in objectives in 90% of cases.
- The move towards consolidation is contrary to the initial focus on regional banking requirements.
- Different global financial crisis have seen large global banks collapsing while smaller ones had survived the crisis due to their strengths and focus on micros aspects.
- With the merger, the weaknesses of the small banks are also transferred to the bigger and healthier bank.
- So far small scale losses, recapitalization could revive the capital base of small banks. Now if the giant shaped SBI books huge loss or incurs high NPAs as it had been incurring, it will be difficult for the entire banking system to sustain.
- Shifting and closure of many branches- for example, 20% SBI branches are closed after merger
- Large banks are not necessarily better banks as seen in SBI merger case.
Case Study – State Bank of India merger with its associates and Bhartiya Mahila Bank.
Constitutional Safeguards available for Undertrials/ Prisoners | |
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Article | What it states |
RIGHT TO EQUALITY: ARTICLE 14 | It states that “the state shall not deny to any person equality before law or the equal protection of laws within the territory of India” |
RIGHT TO FREEDOM: ARTICLE 19 and LIMITATIONS | “freedom of movement”, “freedom to reside and to settle” and “freedom of profession, occupation, trade or business" cannot be enjoyed by the prisoners "freedom of speech and expression", "freedom to become member of an association" etc. can be enjoyed by prisoner |
PROTECTION AGAINST CONVICTION OF OFFENCES: ARTICLE 20(1) | It restricts the power of legislature to implement any criminal law retrospectively, it means if an act is not an offence at the date of its commission it cannot be an offence at the date subsequent to its commission. |
PROTECTION AGAINST DOUBLE JEOPARDY: ARTICLE 20(2) | It states that “no one shall be prosecuted and punished for the same offence more than once” |
PROHIBITION AGAINST SELF INCRIMINATION: ARTICLE 20(3) | It provides that “No person accused of any offence shall be compelled to be a witness against himself.” |
RIGHT TO LIFE AND PERSONAL LIBERTY: ARTICLE 21 | It states that “no one shall be deprived of his life or personal liberty except the procedure established by the law and this procedure must be reasonable, fair and just and not arbitrary, whimsical or fanciful”. |
RIGHTS OF PERSON UNDER ARREST AND DETENTION: ARTICLE 22(1) | It directs that no person who is arrested shall be denied the right to consult and to be defended by the legal practitioner of his choice as well. The right is also available in the Code of the Criminal procedure under section 304. |
RIGHT TO BE PRODUCED BEFORE MAGISTRATE: ARTICLE 22(2) | Every arrested person has right to be produced before the nearest magistrate within 24 hours of arrest No such person shall be detained beyond 24 hours without the authority of a magistrate |
RIGHT TO CONSTITUTIONAL REMEDIES: ARTICLE 32 | When the personal liberty of a person is deprived by the officials illegally, the remedy available to them is by way of Writs under Article 226 of the constitution before the high courts, and under Article 32 of the constitution before the Supreme Court. |
ARTICLE 39-A : EQUAL JUSTICE AND FREE LEGAL AID | It states that “State shall secure that the operation of legal system promotes justice and ensure that the opportunities for securing justice are not denied to any citizen by reason of economic or other disabilities” |
Key Challenges
- Integrating different cultures– Integrating the cultures of two merging banks remains a major task as even SBI has not been able to escape the pain of merging its associates with itself.
- Identity loss- An enforced merger will lead to identity loss for the staff and its large clientele. For example- Vijaya Bank may face identity loss after its merger with Bank of Baroda.
- Human Resource management– Merger announcements trigger confusion, anxiety and insecurity in staff.
- There will be staff surplus requiring relocation or enforced retirement.
- Ensuring that no employee will face adverse service conditions as a consequence of the amalgamation.
- Rationalisation of work procedures between merging entities
- A process of confidence building among the officials is needed and this is in its nature a time-consuming exercise.
- Operational autonomy– operational autonomy for senior management must be ensured for new entity formed after merger.
- Governance and regulatory structure – Governance structure and regulatory structure of the consolidated bank remains in a grey area.
- Too big to fail– The global financial crisis of 2007-08 had established that when institutions are too big, regulatory intervention would get diluted.
Steps to be taken
- Consultation with stakeholders– Vinod Rai, former chairman of Bank Board Bureau (BBB) had underlined the need that various stakeholders need to be engaged before bank consolidation is effected, to ensure the entire process is least disruptive. For example: in the recent merger, heads of the banks are not consulted before making the decision to merge these entities.
- Divesting the shares– There is large headroom for divesting and creating new owners to share the burden of capital infusion. For example- currently, government holdings in PSBs range from 100% in IDBI bank to 61% in Allahabad and Andhra bank.
- Clean the bank before consolidation– The need is to first clean the banks then consolidate the weak bank with the strong bank.
- Strengthening regulation– The need is to strengthen the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 to give the regulator enough teeth to regulate state-run banks.
- Other measures to control bad loans problems:
- Insolvency and Bankruptcy code
- Bank Board Bureau
- Appointment of chiefs of PSBs
- Tenure of chiefs of PSBs
- Measures to ensure accountability
- 4 R’s– The Economic Survey 2015-16 had proposed 4 R’s- Recognition, Recapitalization, Resolution and Reform to deal with challenges of PSBs. The recent move of merging banks is the implementation of this fourth R i.e. reforms in PSBs. The recognition and resolution of stressed assets is expected to improve asset quality.
Way Forward
- Public sector banks should not be merged mindlessly to create a few bigger banks. Prudent selection of banks based on market forces is the need.
- Raghuram Rajan, has, in his note to the Estimates Committee of parliamentspelt it out clearly: “improve governance of public sector banks and distance them from the government” and “delegate appointments entirely to an entity like the Banks Board Bureau.”
- We need a mix of efficiently run PSBs and private banks to serve both development goals and social justice.
- Promoting saving culture among the masses, reducing the gender gap in accessibility of financial services, promoting digitization should also be the priority of the lenders.
- Forced mergers should be avoided and should not become a means to imbibe issues that deeply stall our financial institutions and needs to be addressed separately.