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Commentary/ Mani Shankar Aiyar

Was there a political nexus to Gopalakrishnan's failure?

Warning signals about things being wrong at Indian Bank were received as early as 1992-93 when Indian Bank was discovered to have suffered erosion of assets in the amount of Rs 1.02 billion. In subsequent years, erosion of assets and the size of non-performing assets rose precipitously as follows:

In 1993-94: Erosion of assets -- Rs 11.5 billion; NPAs -- Rs 27.2 billion.

In 1994-95: Erosion of assets -- Rs 14.7 billion; NPAs -- Rs 28 billion.

NPAs constituted a full one-third of Indian Bank's advances during the last three years: 36 per cent in 1993-94; 30 per cent in 1994-95; 35 per cent in 1995-96. This happened despite Indian Bank's MoU with the RBI in 1994 through which Indian Bank undertook to reduce NPAs to not more than 23 per cent of its advances.

Such reckless lending policies wiped out in a single year the recapitalisation of Rs 20 billion granted by the government in 1994-95. The RBI has since refused permission for any further recapitalisation. Indian Bank's recapitalisation requirements now exceed the entire amount for recapitalisation of nationalised banks provided for in Chidambaram's Budget.

Before the scandal broke, RBI inspection reports and recommendatory notes had drawn attention to the following deficiencies:

  • repeated violation of RBI guidelines in making advances;

  • not taking into account serious adverse remarks by auditors;

  • credit expansion for in excess of budgeted provision;

  • credit expansion despite serious distortion in credit:deposit ratio;

  • extensive tapping of call money market;

  • excessive exposure to particular business houses;

  • non-adherence to RBI norms in respect of income recognition and asset classification;

  • accounting for interest income on NPAs on accrual basis in contravention of accounting norms;

  • inclusion in interest receipts and other receipts of ineligible items;

  • short provisioning by classifying NPAs as 'standard loans';
  • Inadequate or even misleading information to the board;

  • non-reporting of fraud cases to the board in a situation of increasing frauds;

  • perfunctory inspection, leading to poor inspection reports on internal controls;

  • no monitoring system for overseas branches of Indian Bank;

  • improper management of credit portfolios;

  • uninhibited exceeding of borrowing limits for single/group borrowers;

  • exceeding delegated powers by sanctioning authorities and ex post facto approvals by higher authorities in a routine manner without proper application of mind;

  • excessive operating expenses leading to operating losses exceeding Rs 2.23 billion;

  • sanctioning of loans on oral instructions of the CMD.
Therefore, the questions to be put to the high-level investigation or judicial commission demanded of the government would include: Names of ministers in the Union and state governments who are beneficiaries of Gopalakrishnan's largesse in their own names, for family members or business in which they have a pecuniary interest;

  • Names of other leading political personalities, including MPs/MLAs, who have derived pecuniary advantage from Indian Bank in terms of loans written off or outstanding;

  • Assessment of number and sources of recommendations made to Gopalakrishnan by political personalities and the extent to which such requests were accommodated by him;

  • Outcome of enquiry ordered by former finance minister Jaswant Singh into Indian Bank's relationship with East-West;

  • Outcome of the departmental probe initially ordered by the finance minister;

  • Did RBI instruct Indian Bank to recast its balance sheet for 1994-95 owing to misclassification of its loan assets and the sudden deterioration in the quality of its loan portfolio? Did Indian Bank act on this instruction to the satisfaction of RBI?

  • Did RBI instruct Indian Banks to intensify its recovery of NPAs? What action did Gopalakrishnan take on this? To what extent have recoveries improved under the new management? If, as reported, the improvement has been significant, why did Gopalakrishan not take the same steps? Was there a political nexus to his failure to do so?

  • Continued
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