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Recently the government has decided to recapitalise the banks in the biggest such

exercise ever, to the tune of about rupees one lakh fifty thousand crore.
Predictably, there has been a lot of criticism and on various grounds. However, in
the humble opinion of this author, at this juncture, recapitalisation was the best
thing one could do for the economy.

Without recapitalisation, a bad banking sector would have served as the bottleneck
choking the whole economy. Mostly the arguments advanced against the move say that
it would create moral hazard, incentivise banks to engage in riskier lending since
they know they would always be bailed out. That is true. However, what is the
alternative? While we may want best of all worlds, in real life we have to engage
in trade-offs. Yes, this will increase riskier behaviour, but not doing so would
mean letting these banks close down. Are we ready for that? What would happen to
the economy in that case?

A common alternative suggested is bank privatisation. It calls for the government


to sell its stake and let these banks raise additional capital from the market.
These banks are already in bad shape. Whatever strength they have is because of
government backing. If the largest shareholder at this stage and that too the
government, abandons them at this stage, do we really think they would be able to
raise an iota of capital from the market on their own? No sir, no. They would go
bust in a day. All of them, without fail. And we would have created the mother of
all Lehmans.

Also, while privatisation will definitely bring in much better discipline and
governance, it would not solve the 'too big to fail' problem which started the day
Lord John Maynard Keynes advanced his general theory. Rescuing the guys who are too
big to fail is just too seductive, the alternative to that is let economically
hundred percent correct, but politically absolutely disastrous Lord Hayek to play
out.

Another common misconstrued argument given is that this bails out all the cronies
or in other words, this is like waving off their debts. This move isn't that at
all. Whatever bad debts were created, due to cronyism or whatever, were created
long ago.

Recapitalisation is not at all bailing them out or waiving them off. They will
continue to remain recoverable. Recapitalisation is merely an attempt to look at
the overall macro economy and try to insulate it from the mistakes done in the
past.

Also, is India ready for a privatised banking sector? What about the Jan Dhan
Yojana and financial inclusion? What about implementing the banking correspondent
model? What about numerous other government schemes? Will we be able to implement
them via private banks?

And finally, yes, the fiscal deficit will rise. But India is not Greece yet, nor is
it on the way to become one. Not unless the economy comes to a grinding halt, which
it could, if not for recapitalisation. Everything involves a trade-off. In my
humble personal opinion, this one is a better bargain. Bank governance issues must
be resolved, but not at this cost.

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