ARUNDHATI BHATTACHARYA
RETIRES AS SBI CHIRMAN
Arundhati Bhattacharya, who retired as chairman
of State Bank of India (SBI) on Friday. Bhattacharya, who joined SBI as
a probationary officer in 1977, is being succeeded by her colleague Rajnish
Kumar. She was the first woman to be appointed chairman of SBI.After taking
over in October 2013, she declared a war on bad loans and pledged to embark on
a digital journey.
“These times of difficulties that we have had, I
think we have used them to strengthen the bank and strengthen it internally so
as to ensure that going forward the bank is in a much better position to be a
part of the growth story of India,” she said.“I am sure that this will also
show up in the future numbers,” she added. Bhattacharya, who is credited with
pulling off the mammoth task of successfully merging five of SBI’s associate
banks, said that the agenda set by Kumar—resolution of stressed loans and
reviving credit growth—was in the right direction.
Currently,
like most of its peers, SBI’s profitability is under strain because of bad
loans and sluggish credit growth, and resolving both these issues are Kumar’s
top priorities. At the end of June, the bank was weighed down by gross
non-performing loans of Rs1.88 trillion or almost one-tenth of its total advances. Bhattacharya said that a revival of credit growth was an unfinished
agenda for her despite the bank’s improved risk management capabilities as well
as underwriting standards. “Even today credit growth is not where we wanted it
to be. So that’s an unfinished agenda. And I think the incoming chairman’s
already stated that it will be his agenda to take that forward,” she said.
She added that with the government’s efforts
related to the infrastructure sector, affordable housing and rural electrification,
among others, credit growth in the banking system is expected to pick up within
this financial year.For fiscal 2018, SBI has guided for a loan growth target of
6-8%. At the end of June, its credit growth was 1.46%. Currently, non-food bank
credit growth for the banking industry is around 6%.Bhattacharya said that
steps taken by the government such as demonetization and the roll out of the
goods and services tax (GST) are big reforms which will take time to settle
down but in the long term will be positive for the economy.Separately, she said
that SBI is planning to launch a GST-related product where the lender will
provide working capital to small companies based on their input and output tax
returns. “The bank is working on a product where if you just show me input and
output tax returns, I will give you money for working capital, without (asking)
anything more,” she said.
According to Bhattacharya, such a system would
make it easier for smaller companies faced with difficulties in making cash
flow projections to avail loans.Rolled out from 1 July, GST works on a refund
mechanism where the manufacturer can claim input tax credit for the inputs
which it has used in the manufacture of the final product.This mechanism has
strained finances of small and medium enterprises because of delayed refunds
leading to a rise in demand for working capital.
Prof. John Kurakar
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