PRESS RELEASE BY AIBOC:
BUSINESS LINE DT.08.03.2014
“New banks
will poach public sector staff”
-Harvinder Singh
OUR BUREAU
Disgruntled
staff of public sector banks are sitting ducks for poachers, says Aiboc
Thiruvananthapuram,
March 7:
The new banks will trigger a scramble for human
resources and this will lead to unhealthy competition for capital, resources
and talent, he added.
Staff of public sector banks are sitting ducks for „poachers,‟
Singh told newspersons here on the eve of the 10th triennial conference of
Aiboc.
The cause of poachers are more than served by Indian
Banks‟
Association which has kept the employees deprived and frustrated during the
last few years and 13 rounds of wage negotiations, Singh said.
Aiboc feels the intent was evident from the aggressive
posturing of Finance Minister P Chidambaram over wage revision after he met
with chiefs of public sector banks in New Delhi on Thursday.
Rising non-performing assets are the result of
faulty policy-making and lack of effective monitoring. It is farcical to blame
it on either the employees or their demand for timely revision of wages, he
said.
Profit motive
Singh also found fault with the tendency to compare
public sector banks with counterparts in the West in terms of resilience in the
face of uncertainties triggered by the financial tsunami. “We are not
commercial banks. Our constitution as public sector banks with a social
objective does not give much importance to profit motive,” he said.
These banks handle
non-remunerative government business and implement development programmes of
Central and State governments. But this is not acknowledged by managements and
policymakers.
Non-performing assets (NPAs) are to the tune of Rs.
2.3 lakh crore as on March 31, 2013. The restructured portfolio is another Rs.
3.5 lakh crore and is rising every quarter. Big-ticket advances and mid-sized
entities are major defaulters. Corporate debt restructuring, one-time
settlements and write-offs drain hundreds of crores of rupees from bank
profits.
Nowhere else in the developed world do banks stretch
themselves thin to finance long-term infrastructure. This is best achieved by
specified institutions and instruments.
The social objectives demand adhering to policy
initiatives such as debt waivers to certain sections of customers.
“We do not mind targeted initiatives for deserving
customers.
But this creates a moral hazard in that a genuine
customer with a clean slate is let down,” said Harshvardhan M, President,
Aiboc.
Banks are also arm-twisted by the government into
parting with seizable dividend, which should normally get ploughed back to
boost capital and reserves, he added.
Also present at the press conference were C.
Rajkumar, Senior Vice- President, Aiboc; PV Mohanan, President, and Abraham
Shaji John, State Secretary, Aiboc (Kerala).
(This article was published in the Business
Line print edition dated March 8, 2014)
Published
in AIBOC website also.
Fin minister p chidambaram is not willing to contest is the news.he knows that from recounting he will become deposit lost minister in election which shows that the man behind this shabby economic crisis,and scams.the most unpopular minister in his own constuency
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