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It won’t be quite as easy as Goyal said.
Rising non-performing assets (NPAs) and sluggish economic growth sparked a 60% decline in corporate borrowing over the last six years, according to an IndiaSpend analysis of Reserve Bank of India (RBI) data, inhibiting the anticipated lending bonanza to companies from banks after demonetisation.
Now, after the government scrapped 86% of India’s bank notes by value, there are growing indicators of a further slowing.
Automobile companies are witnessing the sharpest fall in deliveries to dealers in 16 years, the Times of India reported, home sales have hit a six-year low, NDTV Profit reported, and bank credit to infrastructure companies declined steadily over the first eight months of 2016-17 and contracted 6.7 percent in November, the Indian Express reported, quoting RBI data released on 10 January 2017.
So, the Rs 12.44 lakh crore, that has now returned to the banking system, may be difficult to lend to the corporate sector.
Merely reducing key rates won’t help, since banks will have to meet capital requirements before they start lending, said Vipin Malik, former director, central board of the RBI.
Stating that a lot of unaccounted money has been lodged in banks, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley recently asserted that these deposits would increase the lending capacity of banks.
While the Centre banks on new deposits to revive lending, credit to the corporate sector (manufacturing and services) declined 60%, from Rs 4.7 lakh crore ($71.5 billion) to Rs 1.9 lakh crore ($ 28.6 billion) over six years, according to RBI data.
Of the two sectors, net loans to the manufacturing sector – which accounts for almost 65% of loans to corporates – declined 77% from Rs 3.1 lakh crore ($47.19 billion) at the end of 31 March 2011, to only Rs 72,454 crore ($10.81 billion) at the end of 31 March 2016.
Loans to the services sector declined 46% – from Rs 1.62 lakh crore ($24.29 billion) on 31 March 2011 to Rs 87,689 crore ($13.08 billion) on 31 March 2015. However, credit given to the sector increased marginally to Rs 1.1 lakh crore ($16.4 billion) in March 2016 compared to the previous financial year.
Loans to the transport sector and non-banking financial companies declined more than 56% over the six-year period.
Corporates owe close to Rs 42 lakh crore ($637.57 billion), or about 30% of India’s gross domestic product, to banks as on 31 March 2016, according to RBI data.
While rising NPAs is one reason for the decline in corporate borrowings, declining demand due to an economic slowdown and the stagnation of existing industrial capacity has also contributed to the lending downturn.
The NPAs of public- and private-sector banks were around Rs 6 lakh crore ($89.5 billion) as of March 2016, Jaitley told the Lok Sabha.
The growth rate of eight core industries (electricity, steel, refinery products, crude oil, coal, cement, natural gas and fertilisers) declined from 6.5% in April 2012 to 2.8% in April 2016, according to government data.
In July 2016, the government announced in the Lok Sabha that it is “continuously taking steps to boost growth in these industries.”
Even though most of the NPAs belong to large-scale industries, the impact on loans disbursal has been felt by small and medium enterprises (SMEs).
Demonetisation has further added to the woes of small scale industries. Micro and small scale industries have suffered 35% job losses and 50% dip in revenue in the first 34 days of demonetisation, according to a study conducted by All India Manufacturers Organisation, Indian Express reported on 9 January 2017.
If demand in the economy is to be boosted, SMEs must be remonetised. “It is important to support unorganised and small industries to help fuel demand,” Vipin Malik, Former RBI Director, Central Board said.
To help banks meet a minimum cushion of liquidity, the Finance Ministry in August 2015 said that PSBs would need Rs 1,80,000 crore ($26.8 billion) capital over the next four years.
The government has proposed the Indradhanush plan to infuse Rs 70,000 crore ($10.4 billion) in PSBs over the next four years, although banks will have to raise additional funds from the market.
Jaitley, while presenting the budget in 2015, had said that public sector banks would sell stakes as part of a capital-infusion plan.
“Jaitley’s big-bang bank recapitalisation announcement offers temporary relief,” wrote Tamal Bandyopadhyay, the author of Sahara: The Untold Story and A Bank for the Buck, in his August 2015 column in Mint.
Rising deposits triggered by demonetisation could lead to Rs 38,000 crore ($5.7 billion) treasury gains for PSBs, according to this report from India Rating & Research Credit Agency, which would allow PSBs to meet their minimum capital needs.
Banks are poised to benefit from the softening of yields, considering they are the largest holders of government bonds, the report added.
The government’s and experts’ optimism over prospects of an increase in lending capacity of banks has failed to impress the RBI.
“As banks clean up balance-sheets, their capital position may remain insufficient to support higher credit growth,” the RBI said in its December 2016 Financial Stability Report.
(Note: Conversions based on Rs 67 per dollar.)
(Mulye is a New Delhi-based reporter and a member of 101Reporters.com, a pan-India network of grassroots reporters. This article was first published in IndiaSpend.)
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