Futures of State Run Banks depend on their understanding of root causes of present crisis and their ability to take remedial measures. If they still say that bank is safe and future is bright they will never take corrective step. But their false ego may jeopardize the interest of investors and poor customers and also their employees:
Present
Trend :---Bulk Deposit down, Asset Liability mismatch problems will arise, Long
Term lending impossible on short term deposits and so on .But
through Focus on Retail Deposit, Cost of Deposit will come down and
Profitability will increase and finally core value of bank will go up.
Credit
Growth will be poorer: ---- Deposit growth lower, Liquidity will shrink; Credit
growth will be low because focus will be more on Recovery than on Fresh credit.
Recovery of Bad loans will increase and hence Quality of Asset will improve.
Gross
NPA: ---- Ratio will go up for a few coming quarters because of poor Credit
growth. Banks could show less Gross NPA ratio in the past either by concealment
of bad assets or due to bulk lending to big corporate which helped in reduction
of Gross NPA to Gross Credit ratio.
Now
the position of these banks will turn pathetic because Ministry of Finance and
RBI have advised them to refrain from indulging in mobilization of bulk deposit
and sanction of short term lending. They will have to focus on real banking and
discard window dressing .
Due
to various guidelines issued by Ministry of Finance and RBI in recent past ,
Overall quality Business will grow and the same will be visible after a few
years just as bad policies of the past ten years are showing
their consequences now. But after a year or two the real growth will
start emerging out and real profit will precipitate and finally the
real purpose of banks will be served.
Root causes of downfall and strategy to ensure future bright:---
Field
officials are not well experienced and well trained. They will adopt defensive
strategy to survive. Banks will have to remove ninety percent of Branch
Managers and Regional Heads who are of poor quality. It is painful that during
last four decades after nationalization of bank or during last two decades of
reformation era , banks have not yet framed any policy for picking up officers
to Head a Branch. This is why there are hundreds of such branches in each bank
where ratio of bad asset is more than 50 percent of their total credit. There
are many branches where Gross NPA is more than 10 percent.
Officers
who flatter bosses are picked for the post of Branch Head as also for promotion
to higher scale whereas Officers who are really matured, skilled, experienced
and talented enough to identify good customers and who have the potential
and who have grown capacity to read the credit worthiness of credit
seekers are languishing in non-serious, non-critical and at less potential
places and leading a life in frustration due to their non promotion and due to
inefficient and ill management of their bosses .
If banks
have to improve their bottom line they have to revisit and replan their policy
of promotion and posting. They have to encourage good Branch Manager and
understand the family problems of officers and bank staff .They have to refrain
from making policy only to please the leaders of majority trade unions of
officers or bank employees. They have to learn how to punish bad officers and
encourage good officers and prove their knowledge by their actions.
Qualities
of bank employees have to be judged not by their qualification or by
achievement of targets or their closeness with executives but with the quality
of business they mobilize.
Top Ranked
Officials:----- It not enough to preach these sermons in business plan
meeting only. Top executives have to exhibit by their actions that they are
real lovers of good workers. They have to prove that they do what they say.
They have to prove by their actions that they are real owners of the bank. They
have not to be happy by red carpet welcome and costly gifts and set of flower
bouquets offered by field functionaries during their visit to their locations
.They have to stop awarding officers who give them grand red carpet welcome and
speak all good words for visitors. They have to stop punishing officers who
fail to extend red carpet welcome according to their wishes. They have to stop
earning name and fame through unwarranted spending on inaugural functions
in praise of and in flattery of some or the other dignitaries.
Policy of
recruitment and Promotion:---- What I feel is that policy of recruitment
and that of promotion and transfer was much better in seventies and to some
extent in eighties i.e. before the introduction and piecemeal implementation of
of Pillai Committee Report or Khandelwal Committee report. But unfortunately
these policies have deteriorated a lot during last decade or two. Every year
policies are changed to suit their whims and fancies. It is painful that
bankers and regulators have not followed the recommendations of any committee
in true spirit but followed only those lines which suited them and without any
hesitation their successors deviated from the main theme of such committee
reports.
It is
astonishing that banks recruit officer directly in scale II, scale III or IV
from education campus and post them as Credit Officer or Risk Officer or vigilance officer or Auditors or credit officers or branch heads. Banking is such a business which
cannot be safe in the hands of those who are unable and incapable to read the
character of person with whom they deal in money.
How can a
direct officer ascertain credit worthiness of a loan seeker or the inherent
risk in a credit decision until he or she is aware of the intricacies of credit
decisions and the credit worthiness, integrity, capacity and character of the
loan seekers?
Bank
management have to learn the value of senior officers, the value of experience
and the value of character of an officer .Banks have to learn how to recognize
the good officers and save them from frustration.
Top officials
have to learn that whimsical promotion and arbitrary transfers kills the
working spirit of the officers at least those who are sincere and devoted
performer. When good officers are not respected, officers in general tend to
ignore the quality and tempted to apply all easy tools to keep their bosses in
good spirit mostly at the cost of their organization.
This trend has
to be reversed if state run banks desire to survive and prosper like private
banks.
Political
interference: ----Lastly Politicians have to stop exploitation of state run
banks for political gain and indirectly help private banks in earning more and
more profit and achieving more and more growth.Nationalisation of banks was
done in 1969 to stop exploitation of poor by money lenders and then in 1991
absolute freedom was given to banks to get rid of exploitation by bank
employees.
But
unfortunately politicians did not stop exploitation of these banks for their
vested interest and hence the erosion of banks continued. Trade union leaders
who were made to protect the interest of employees also started playing in the
hands of officers sitting at top posts. As a result, government could neither
stop exploitation by money lenders nor that by politicians or trade union
leaders.
Banks
were nationalised for welfare of common men but it is painful that banks has
become a tool for welfare of politicians, top ranked officials and top ranked
corporate houses. This trend has to be reversed in the interest of investors,
customers and employees.
If you have time to read more please read the article furnished below and published today in Economic Times (17th August 2012) link of which is given below.
K RAMKUMAR
It is by staying connected with people. Conversing and debating with people at their workplace regularly. This is what we do with our family and friends. This, though time consuming, helps us deal with the emerging areas of strains early and not wait for this impersonal index. The relationship-mending process, when we stay connected, is like the way our tissues heal.
Finally, it is only where care is, discipline and toughness can be. One without the other creates excesses and abuses. Unfortunately, our definition for care is also mechanical. Automated calendar-generated birthday and anniversary wishes, concierge-delivered flowers, company-budgetfunded mementos and rewards. There is nothing personal about it.
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/news-by-company/corporate-trends/human-resource-professionals-have-lost-sight-of-the-connect-with-their-people/articleshow/15525111.cms
If you have time to read more please read the article furnished below and published today in Economic Times (17th August 2012) link of which is given below.
Human resource professionals have lost sight of the connect with their people
K RAMKUMAR
The last few weeks have been life defining for me. I have struggled to remain in touch with my normal life, while having taken up the job of trying to focus attention on a broken window - our employee relations. Awanish (the Maruti Suzuki HR executive) paid with his life for the follies of an entire profession and the working community.
In all the multitude of proposals and mails I saw from senior people who manage humans, I could not discover any humanness.
They missed the person, engaged with the title even in offering condolence and glibly believed that healing is rooted in skill building and fixing the law. It appears that, to many of us, the 'resource' reference to humans has assumed giant proportions.
I have in the last decade watched with horror the decadence of our thinking, from engaging and relating to people to managing human resources. We are obsessed with high-sounding concepts, processes, tool and metrics, but have lost sight of the human being.
Talk to any professional in this function, you will struggle to make sense of the jargon he speaks. Walk into their workplace and ask a 100 'people' about these 'human resource managers', you will discover the disconnect these professionals have with their people. So, to me, this resource management piece has to be substituted by people relationship focus. Even market-facing staff are called 'relationship managers'.
The argument here is not that name change will alter the central disconnect. But at least it will notify to all of us that we are essentially relationship managers and not only resource managers.
We believe in the absurdity that there is something called an 'engagement index' and by tracking it we will change the 'quality' of our relationships with people. When was the last engagement survey and index publication we did with our family and friends? Once again, do you see the mechanical metaphor?
Humans are endowed with the gift of judging the relationship quality and strength. It is contrived to reduce it to numbers and believe that a 0.5% or a 5% change in it indicates anything. You may ask me then how do we know the health of our workplace relationships? Certainly not by these indices
It is by staying connected with people. Conversing and debating with people at their workplace regularly. This is what we do with our family and friends. This, though time consuming, helps us deal with the emerging areas of strains early and not wait for this impersonal index. The relationship-mending process, when we stay connected, is like the way our tissues heal.
Intervention through medicines and surgery is when illness has gone beyond self-healing. Human body may respond to this but people at workplace respond better to ongoing self-healing, because unlike humans, a workplace illness is an epidemic due to the numbers.
To further this argument, let me place before you another evidence: our obsession with performance management. We have progressed from the absurd to the insane.
We believe that the system and process of budgeting, goal and metrics, will replace the trust and engagement-intensive process between the performer and the boss who enables it.
The argument again is not that goals and metrics are unimportant, but they cannot replace the human process of working with and showing people the way to achieve them. Here again, the clinical mindset overemphasises the impersonal aspect of Conengagement viz tools, MIS and numbers.
We try to make up for this by eulogising the term 'feedback'.
But do we realise the way this sits in our minds is also in 'mechanical system metaphor'. That it will be periodic, goal-focused, result-centric, direct and action-focused.
Brilliant! We could have had this statement for any mechanical or electrical system. But where is the human here? Where is the place for joining in and assisting? Where is the place for handling emotions - fear of failure, anxiety of not knowing the how, disappointment of repeated efforts not yielding results, angst that a peer is speeding along and I am stuck, the shame induced by target-review meetings, the tight stomach at the end of a day of things going wrong and above all, the burden of having to carry the pressure of the bosses' performance.
Add to all this the 'resource' centered concept of 'productivity' and 'pay for performance', the damage is complete. Once again, no one is complaining about having to be productive and delivering performance, it is the approach to it which is being questioned.
Finally, it is only where care is, discipline and toughness can be. One without the other creates excesses and abuses. Unfortunately, our definition for care is also mechanical. Automated calendar-generated birthday and anniversary wishes, concierge-delivered flowers, company-budgetfunded mementos and rewards. There is nothing personal about it.
An IIT admission, a 10th class result or daughter's wedding are all cherished memories for all of us but how do we show our care for people who matter to us? How about sending an sms to the father or mother. Isn't this caring?
We fail to visit the colleague who is unwell but simply send a 'get-well-soon' card or email. We do not lend a shoulder by being with the family which has suffered the bereavement by being with them. We send the CEOs letter and a compensation cheque, as governments do after a rail accident. Who will stay with the family and help them heal and move on?
You can 'fix' anything but not the personal touch. Care is not in words, it is in deeds. It is deeds that humanises care and lends it a personal touch.
In conclusion, if we fail to discover the people at our workplaces and dignify their humanness, we are in for a strife-filled period of resource management, irrespective of what the engagement indices will tell us and the cover pages of 'Best employers study' may brag.
(The author is the Executive Director at ICICI Bank)
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/news-by-company/corporate-trends/human-resource-professionals-have-lost-sight-of-the-connect-with-their-people/articleshow/15525111.cms
SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 2012
Lion's Share of Fresh Loans Goes to Rich AND BIG Corporate Houses
The main purpose of nationalisation of banks by late Indira Gandhi was to help poor and middle class who were exploited by local moneylenders.For last four decades and more Ministry of Finance and Reserve bank of India have been harping on lending to Priority Sector and impressing upon bankers to help weaker section.More and more thrust is always given on lending to Farm sector to boost agricultural production and in turn help common men who are suffering from abnormal price rise due to scarcity of food items in the market and due to resultant heavy black marketing of products and exorbitant higher prices.
2 comments:
Very few will ask for becoming branch head since thre r not enough staff in branches and bm's r supposed to comply all rules and regulations simultaneously while sitting in counters...and regarding APAR,the marks r purely based on br performance only, nobody checks whether staff is there,area of operations, minimum infrastructure etc..an inquiry to lapse in service due to any above constraint will be the end of the career of a bm..asst mngrs hve better chances for promotions since their performance is not directly linked to branch performance and may be flattering will be having an impact..the lucky ones escapes enquiries and overcome other problems in bank will be in top job in future..
It is striking to note while propoganding nationalisation of banks no mention of officers/staff is made who are running the banks.Why? Again It is highly surprising to note that everybody seems to be worried about monetory capital of banks.Many high worded and even borrowed theories are being served to accept but no mention is being made of Human capital who have to run the business.Why? It looks either common bankers are not in the scheme of things (which questions their ingeniousness)or are delebrately ignored.In any way the present system of ruuning PSU Banks is not worthwile and needs revamping.But again is a question why it is being draged? Things are not being made clear.
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