IMF warns India over public sector banks, advocates privatisation

Business standard
August 08, 2018
By Indivjal Dhasmana

The (IMF) has cautioned India against which emerged from the government ownership of the and suggested to the country that it should consider of these lenders.
In its review of India under Article IV, also flagged external vulnerabilities on rising import bill, particularly from increasing oil prices and global protectionist measures.
The review done by executive directors of said systemic persist, as the weak credit cycle could impair growth and the sovereign-bank nexus has created vulnerabilities.
underscored the importance of a comprehensive plan to improve the governance, internal controls, and operations of public sector banks, including by considering more rapid withdrawal of public ownership.
Persistently-high household expectations and large general government fiscal deficits and debt remain key macro economic challenges, it said.


The directors supported the recent tightening of monetary policy. The review was done when RBI had announced the monetary tightening in June. It highlighted the need for RBI to raise the repo rate further. RBI had in fact done so in its August policy.
Domestic risks pertain to tax revenue shortfalls related to continued implementation issues and delays in addressing the twin balance sheet problems and other structural reforms.
IMF directors emphasised the importance of modernising and regulations and other measures to help increase formal employment, particularly the employment of women.
They considered that these measures would lead to increased productivity growth and help India harness the demographic dividend from a large number of younger workers.
It, however, said external risks are contained and risks, in general, have downward bias.
"External vulnerabilities remain contained but have risen. The (CAD) widened to 1.9 per cent of GDP in FY 2017-18, on rising imports and oil prices," it said.
Gross international reserves rose to $424.5 billion (about 8 months of prospective imports of goods and services) at the end of March 2018, but declined to $407.8 billion in the third week of June 2018.
On the external side, the report said risks include a further increase in international oil prices, tighter global financial conditions, a retreat from cross-border integration including spillover risks from a global trade conflict, and rising regional geopolitical tensions.
Reference:

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

ED tracks Swiss Bank A/Cs of Agusta scamster

J&K Cricket Board Scam: Chargesheet Filed Against Farooq Abdullah, 3 Others By CBI

As financial insecurity rises in urban India, so does investment in insurance