Banking sector reforms, which is a major component of
Macroeconomic Adjustment Programme in India, has changed the trends
and patterns of banking over the last six to seven years. This paper seeks
to analyse the trends in credit deployment by industry, by bank group,
by rural and urban areas, and by states over the recent period. The
argument of the paper is that serious regional and sectoral inequalities
are developing in the deployment of commercial credit in this country.
The economic reasoning for nationalising the major banks in 1969
was the imperfection in the allocation of credit. With bank nationalisation
there was a rapid expansion of the banking network into rural and semiurban
areas, and an increase in the share of agriculture and small industry
and transport and trade in the total credit deployed. The banking sector
reforms have changed this trend. The number of loan accounts has fallen
by 60 lakhs in six years, and the fall is largely confined to agriculture,
transport operators and trade. The new private banks and foreign banks
are increasing their presence in the emerging business of loans for
personal and professional services.
There is a striking regional dimension to the developments of the
last few years. The emerging banks and the existing ones are competing
to expand in South, and North-West India attracted by the growing credit
business in a milieu with strong banking habits. This has resulted in a
drastic reallocation of total commercial credit from the poorer agricultural
states to Delhi, Maharastra and Tamilnadu. The situation is one where
private banks are left to "skim the cream" without investing in the longterm
development of banking habits.
JEL Classification: G21, G28
Key Words: banking sector reforms, nationalisation, directed credit,
regional inequalities.
History
Publisher
Centre for Development Studies
Citation
Narayana, D. (2000) Banking sector reforms and the emerging inequalities in commercial credit deployment in India. CDS working papers, no.300. Trivandrum: CDS.