By Kavaljit Singh | Commentary | July 19, 2019
Fifty years ago, on July 19, 1969, Indira Gandhi, who was both Prime Minister and Finance Minister at that time, decided to nationalize 14 major privately-owned commercial banks of India. Banks with a deposit base of over Rs500 million were selected for nationalization while foreign banks were excluded. Six more private banks were later nationalized in 1980.
Analysts have described the nationalization of banks as the most significant economic event after India’s independence in 1947. But if we look globally,…
By Kavaljit Singh | Letter (FT) | July 5, 2019
Further to your report “India’s shadow banking crisis sparks credit crunch” (FT.com, July 3): even more worrisome is the danger of the ongoing liquidity squeeze in the shadow banking sector turning into a more serious solvency issue. Several liquidity-starved shadow banks have already initiated the sale of loan portfolios and assets to meet repayment obligations.
As shadow banks are the largest net borrowers of funds from the financial system with a substantial part of funding coming from banks, mutual funds…