New Delhi: Chief Economic Adviser K V Subramanian on Tuesday exhorted financial institutions to avoid crony lending and focus on high quality loans for creation of assets that will help the country become a USD 5 trillion economy.
Observing that Indian banking sector since the early 1990s faced the problem of poor quality lending especially on large loans, he said, loans were not given to most creditworthy borrowers but to crony capitalists, leading to high distress.
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"When the financial sector decides to actually lend to a particular borrower who is more connected even though that borrower may not be the most creditworthy, it means that capital is not being provided. There is an opportunity cost as the capital does not go to a more creditworthy borrower," he said at an event organised by industry chamber FICCI.
It is the duty of the financial sector to ensure that optimal capital allocation happens in the economy, he added.
It is to be noted that the bad loan problem in the banking sector is large because of the high exposure of banks towards infrastructure which was facing problems on several counts.
"I think it is extremely critical now that the financial sector owns up this responsibility of doing high-quality lending, especially on the infrastructure side, and really avoid crony lending... I think that is basically the mantra for the financial sector," he advocated.
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He also suggested strengthening corporate governance in the financial sector to ensure high-quality lending and linking incentives of senior management to quality lending.