Close X
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ready To Be ‘Neelakantha’, Drink Poison To Clean System: RBI Chief Urjit Patel

IANS, 14 Mar, 2018 12:17 PM
    Expressing deep anguish over a spate of banking frauds, RBI Governor Urjit Patel said today that like the "Neelakantha", the central bank will consume poison and face brickbats, but will persist with endeavours to become better with each trial.
     
    Breaking silence over the Rs. 12,967 crore scam at Punjab National Bank, he said: "I have chosen to speak today to convey that we at the Reserve Bank of India also feel the anger, hurt and pain at the banking sector frauds and irregularities."
     
    Delivering a lecture at the Gujarat National Law University in Gandhinagar, he said: "In plain simple English, these practices amount to a looting of our country's future by some in the business community, in cahoots with some lenders."
     
    Mr Patel said RBI has in place asset quality review of banks and "we are doing all we can to break this unholy nexus".
     
    Invoking mythology, he said RBI has undertaken the cleaning up of the country's credit culture as the Mandara mount or the churning rod in the Amrit Manthan or the Samudra Manthan of the modern day Indian economy.
     
    Until the churn is complete and the nectar of stability safely secured for the country's future, someone must consume the poison that emanates along the way, he said.
     
     
     
     
    "If we need to face the brickbats and be the Neelakantha consuming this poison, we will do so as our duty; we will persist with our endeavours and get better with each trial and tribulation along the way," the Governor said.
     
    He also wished that more promoters and banks, individually or collectively through their industry bodies, would reconsider being on the side of "Devas rather than Asuras in this Amrit Manthan".
     
    He made a pitch for "making banking regulatory powers neutral to bank ownership and leveling the playing field between public sector and private sector banks".
     
    Observing that there has been a tendency in the pronouncements post revelation of the fraud that RBI supervision team should have caught it, Mr Patel said no banking regulator can catch or prevent all frauds.
     
    "While that can always be said ex post with any fraud, it is simply infeasible for a banking regulator to be in every nook and corner of banking activity to rule out frauds by 'being there'," he said.
     
    Referring to PNB, Mr Patel said the RBI had identified, based on cyber risk considerations, the exact source of operational hazard through which "we understand" now the fraud had been perpetrated.
     
    In particular, he said the RBI had issued precise instructions via three circulars in 2016 to enable banks to eliminate the hazard.
     
    "It turns out ex post the bank had simply not done so. Clearly, the internal processes at the bank failed in allowing the operational hazard to remain in place in spite of clear instructions to close it," he said.
     
    Mr Patel said the RBI will undertake actions against the bank that it is empowered to but this set is limited under its Banking Regulation Act powers over PSBs.
     
    Noting that "success has many fathers; failures none", the Governor said there has been the usual blame game, passing the buck, and a ton of honking, mostly short-term and knee-jerk reactions.
     
    "These appear to have prevented the participants in this cacophony from deep reflection and soul searching that can help solve fundamental issues that are the root cause of such frauds and related irregularities in the banking sector," he said.
     
    Mr Patel also flagged the issue of rising bad loans (NPA) saying that the problems needs immediate attention.
     
    "Its magnitude is larger than Rs. 8.5 lakh crores of stressed assets on bank balance sheets and its significance stems from several practices in promoter-bank credit relationship that need immediate attention," he said.
     
    The RBI has been clamping down on the failure to recognise asset quality as non-performing as per its norms by requiring that banks, whose divergence exceeds by 15 per cent of the true non performing assets (NPAs) as per the norms, disclose the divergence.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Homeless Man Returns Mistakenly Donated Diamond Ring To B.C. Woman

    Homeless Man Returns Mistakenly Donated Diamond Ring To B.C. Woman
    Trinda Gajek was visiting Nanaimo last week when she came across a young man who she said "wasn't looking so good" and offered him some cash.

    Homeless Man Returns Mistakenly Donated Diamond Ring To B.C. Woman

    Man Stabbed In Targeted Attack In Downtown Vancouver On Christmas Eve

    Man Stabbed In Targeted Attack In Downtown Vancouver On Christmas Eve
    The VPD are investigating what appears to be a targeted attack against a man in his 30s this afternoon in downtown Vancouver. No arrests have been made and the victim is not cooperating with police

    Man Stabbed In Targeted Attack In Downtown Vancouver On Christmas Eve

    Homicide Team Probing 'Targeted' Death Of Gavinder Grewal In North Vancouver, B.C.

    Homicide Team Probing 'Targeted' Death Of Gavinder Grewal In North Vancouver, B.C.
    The Integrated Homicide Investigations Team says in a release that Grewal's death is believed to be targeted and linked to other gang violence in the Lower Mainland.

    Homicide Team Probing 'Targeted' Death Of Gavinder Grewal In North Vancouver, B.C.

    Some Quebec Flood Victims Preparing To Spend Christmas In Hotel Rooms

    Some Quebec Flood Victims Preparing To Spend Christmas In Hotel Rooms
    The Montreal-area resident, his wife and their four children are one of several families who are still living in hotel rooms ever since flood waters swept through their home last spring.

    Some Quebec Flood Victims Preparing To Spend Christmas In Hotel Rooms

    B.C. Health Official Wants To Put Safe And Common Opioid In Vending Machines

    B.C. Health Official Wants To Put Safe And Common Opioid In Vending Machines
    Making a safe opioid available in vending machines may be the next harm reduction tool to fight the deadly overdose epidemic, says the executive medical director of the B.C. Centre for Disease Control.

    B.C. Health Official Wants To Put Safe And Common Opioid In Vending Machines

    Fernie, B.C., Celebrates Opening Of Outdoor Rink Following Deadly Ammonia Leak

    Fernie, B.C., Celebrates Opening Of Outdoor Rink Following Deadly Ammonia Leak
     Snow and bone-chilling cold could not dampen the enthusiasm of a British Columbia community as residents opened an outdoor ice rink Thursday night and took another step in their recovery from a deadly tragedy.

    Fernie, B.C., Celebrates Opening Of Outdoor Rink Following Deadly Ammonia Leak