INDIAN BANKING SECTOR: STAR REFORMER OF 2015
Now that we
are way past US FED rate hike and ECB quantitative easing, we can now look at
our own domestic economy and major reforms undertaken in 2015. Being an
emerging market, our economic outlook is so much dominated by inflows and outflows
of FDI & FIIs, that we have forgotten our own financial gangotari, our
rural unbanked population. The Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PJDY) has accumulated,
approx Rs. 26000 crore as on November 2015 by opening 19 crore bank accounts within
one year. This feat would have been impossible without vast penetrating network
of our PSU banks. Even though we feel that our PSU banks are there in every
nook and corner of this country, 40% of our population is still unbanked. Thus,
the Indian banking sector especially PSU banks needed a structural overhauling to
tune in with volatile global scenario.
The year 2015
started well for the banking sector with ‘Gyan Sangam’ in January where the bankers
(PSU) along with government laid out both short term and long term goals for
strengthening the Indian banking sector. This was followed by the 7 point ‘INDRADHANUSH’,
program launched by the government on 14th August 2015. Though the banks
had been long asking for empowerment, higher capitalization and removing
bottlenecks for de-stressing assets, the major breakthrough was splitting of CMD
& MD posts and bank board bureau for monitoring the performance of the PSU
banks. Licenses for small and payment banks completed the picture and thus fulfilling
the financial inclusion agenda of the government.
PSU banks
have under-performed in the stock market in 2015, due to lower profit margins,
NIMs and falling ROAs compared to their private sector peers. But in the long
run, PSB banks will not only outperform but will tether the whole financial
system together making the Indian economy even more resilient and dynamic.
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