Meaning and Definition:
In the Indian financial
parlance, a non-performing asset is a bad loan that is not able to service
either interest or principal or both for a period over 90 days.
Significance:
Indian banks, especially
public or government sector (PSU) banks have accumulated huge amounts of NPAs
over the past many years. The reasons for NPAs are threefold:
Borrowers
deliberately not repaying bank loans;
Even good and
healthy companies coming under stress on account of global events – for example
the worldwide collapse in commodity prices have stressed producers of crude
oil, minerals and metals;
Improper credit
decisions by banks;
Remedy:
In order to prevent the collapse of the
banking system, like the 2008 Lehman Brothers event, The Reserve Bank of India
(RBI), especially under the previous governor Raghuram Rajan, pushed all the
banks to rid their balance sheets of bad loans by making adequate provisions
for losses. As a result almost all banks have been writing of bad loans in the
last few quarters.
In the mean time, The Government of India has also pledged and indeed infusing fresh
capital to strengthen the PSU Banks.
Is the cure permanent?
PSU banks have been recapitalized in the
past but had fallen back to the old and inefficient ways in the past. It
remains to be seen whether this time around the cure is permanent or one more
repetitive instance.