Bankers
may have a low credibility for having "cried wolf too often", RBI
Governor Raghuram Rajan said even as he appeared favouring their case for
easing of strict capital control measures to boost growth.
The outspoken Governor also likened the
situation in India to that of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in industrial
countries, saying a need for faster growth is the central factor in both
scenarios. The greater demand on banks to hold capital in the
post-financial crisis scenario has come at a cost.
"It made sense post financial crisis to ask
banks to hold more capital. But one of the concerns bankers have been
expressing, even if bankers may have low credibility because they have cried
wolf too often, that eventually it will... create greater aversion to taking on
risky lending. India has been assigned the lowest investment grade rating
with a high risk profile by various global agencies.
“We see
some of that today. Certainly, as an emerging market central bank regulator, I
see that foreign banks have stopped opening branches because our credit rating
is BAA, which implies higher risk. From that perspective, international banks
who are asked to put in money in India feel it is not worth it, because they
have to set aside a lot more capital."
"So we need to ask ourselves, is more capital good or is
it likely to impinge on activities banks do. There is a trade-off and this
calls for more empirical work as to what the right level of capital is." There is a reason why banks operate. All
these proposals to do away with banks, to my mind, will cause serious costs on
the system, it will increase the cost of financing and therefore we have to be
very careful.
Source(Economic Times)
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