On PSU Bank Merger - Missing the Woods for the Trees
Mr.
Krishnamurthy’s spirited views on how the proposed merger of PSU banks be
handled (The Hindu, 24th September 2019 - Makingthe grand Indian PSB mergers work) seems akin to a typical response in
banks where loan appraisal notes are prepared after the decision to sanction a
loan has been made so as to ensure smooth and hassle free disbursement without
leaving any trace of the indiscretions on those who have to implement the
decision!
It
also raises some interesting questions.
First, does the merger
move demonstrate the lackadaisical approach of policy planners? There is a one
word answer to that. NO, in capital letters without any spelling mistakes.
Irrespective of persuasion or ideology it is always in the interest of the
ruling political class to keep control of the key financial intermediaries
firmly in their hands. In India this has ensured, on one hand control over
sanction of freebies in the form of cheap & directed credit and loan
waivers to key players (read that as local politicians and strong-men) in the
mass market which in turn enables them to get the votes in required numbers to
win elections. On the other hand, it has helped steady and assured funding to
key businessmen and industrialists who in turn finance and grease the political
machinery. Merging the PSU banks by reducing the numbers would enable easier
control on both sides of this game. It is as simple as that! This is also the
main reason why some of the key recommendations over the decades have been
blissfully ignored. Such as disbanding of Department of Banking (Narasimham I),
more care in selecting top executives (Nayak – short-listing was opaque and
typical interviews were virtually a shame), or the continued operations of BBB
in selecting top executives from the same jaded cohort and no progress in
recruitment of competent and professional for Bank Boards.
Second, was the key
concern about announcing the merger lack of clear articulation of the rationale
behind bringing disparate and weak banks together or the desperate need to
announce some mighty sounding changes so as to dampen the effects of other disturbing
information about the economy? Is it just a coincidence that the merger was
announced about 1 hour after the latest GDP numbers were announced?
Third, as far as
efficiency gains or improvements are concerned, why does all discussion get
stuck only at the high NPA levels? Net profits in banks is arrived at by first
deducting operating costs and then provisions from net interest margin. Staff
costs of PSU banks as a percentage of Operating Costs is 3 to 4 times that of
their private sector counterparts. Now since staff in PSU banks are not on the
average paid 3 to 4 times that of private sector banks (not even by a very long
shot), it should be obvious that a major reason for the lower profitability is also
on account of high staff costs on account of low staff productivity. The
underlying reasons could be low morale, outdated and redundant operating
procedures, low skill levels, over manning etc. Somehow this aspect, that
proximate cause of low profitability in PSU banks is also due to low staff
productivity, hardly finds mention in any discussion.
Fourth, the
narrative does not explain the high NPA levels at par with PSU banks in many
high-profile private sector banks (both existing and those who have become
history) or some well-known and established foreign banks. Could there be some
other underlying reasons such as an outdated conceptual framework or misplaced
regulatory priorities under which banking is practiced in India which
contribute to the regular occurrence of high NPA levels? A framework which is
not challenged by the academic community but carefully nurtured by the
regulator? For example, the artificial dichotomy between working capital
finance from term debt (only going concerns can hope to service debt and for an
entity to continue as a going concern, it requires both working capital as well
as term finance), or the heavy reliance on security as the basis for most
lending (depending on foreclosure of security as the prime means of recovery of
debt would impose such high transaction costs that no financial intermediary can
even hope to be viable), or failure to differentiate between equity and debt
risk (where the asset portfolio contains both equity as well as debt risk with
no clear demarcation between the two and the pricing is based wholly on debt
risk) ensures that the portfolio is perpetually sub-optimally priced and
lending operations would be ab initio
non-viable and there would be a steady incidence of NPAs which no amount of
window dressing (including indefinite postponement of implementation of the
Indian Accounting Standards (IndAS) norms for banks) can hide. No amount
of ministrations or efficiency gains can help convert this congenital defect.
Fifth, a suggestion
which keeps recurring is the need to induct professionals, especially in risk
management and technology areas, at market related remuneration levels. What
seems to be forgotten is that monetary returns are far from being key drivers
of any professional worth his salt. Good professionals also need a culture and
working environment to live up to their potential and in the absence of which
they either become white elephants or simply pack up and leave.
Sixth, without clarity
on market niches which exist and may be fruitfully exploited, and the kind of products
and skills required to exploit them, there can be no direction on the kind of
training that is required or should be imparted. Without such clarify, there
would continue to be extreme competition in narrow product market segments
leaving vast sections of the society and economy outside the pale of formal
financial intermediation – with its accompanying discontents. One example which
should provide the proof – if a proof is required – is the extremely low levels
of utilisation of humongous numbers of PMJDY accounts. And this is not because
the potential for savings is absent in the Indian economy. Is it a wonder that
Indian financial markets continue to be highly fragmented?
Seventh, related to the
above is that if PSU banks are to be really efficient and effective they need
to build the ability to strategize and develop skills in identifying and
exploiting market niches.
Seventh, why
should and to what extent could governments actively plan steps to offset a
possible slow expansion in bank credit? Is that an acceptance of the unsaid
fact that existing PSU top management are incompetent? Or that the patronal
relationship carefully built up over the last five decades between bank
management and their political masters has ensured that present day management
are incapable or precluded from taking independent decision taking? Moreover,
if the government has to involve itself in distangling ownership in JVs of PSU banks, what are bank managements expected
to do?
No amount of
visionary leadership or rhetoric can replace a basic understanding of how
financial markets operate, which is in no way helped by the fact that they have
a mind of their own and operate in fairly counter-intuitive ways. And without
that understanding any fiddling around in the policies and practices on
operation of financial markets is nothing short of quackery. Research over the
last half a century has helped clarifying very many aspects, but our policy
makers and academics refuse to take cognizance. The irony is that a key aspect
of this understanding was developed by an American economist working at the
Indian Statistical Institute at Delhi!