SME Times is powered by   
Search News
Just in:   • US Congressman warns India ties cooling over tariffs, China challenge  • Indian American community leader calls for tariff reversal to bolster India–US relations  • Gold, silver prices jump on MCX amid weak dollar, global cues  • PM Modi begins 3-nation visit to further bolster trade, investment ties  • Rupee slides over weak global cues, FII outflows 
Last updated: 23 Dec, 2023  

Sitharaman.9.thmb.jpg Govt cracks whip on public sector banks over big insolvency cases

Sitharaman.9.jpg
   Top Stories
» PM Modi begins 3-nation visit to further bolster trade, investment ties
» Rupee slides over weak global cues, FII outflows
» Sensex, Nifty open higher on hopes of India–US trade deal
» Nifty likely to touch 29,000 in 2026 driven by consumption recovery, RBI support
» US trade representative Rick Switzer meets FS Vikram Misri, discusses economic and trade ties
IANS | 23 Dec, 2023
The Finance Ministry has directed the managing directors of public sector banks to review the top 20 insolvency cases every month, financial services secretary Vivek Joshi said told journalists on Friday.

The government has asked for reviews of insolvency cases as there are delays in admission of cases in insolvency courts, he explained.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will also review the functioning of the National Asset Reconstruction Company Ltd (NARCL) as there are delays in acquiring soured loans, Joshi said.

The government had called a meeting on Friday with public sector banks and the NARCL management to sort out the issue.

NARCL was set up to take over and dispose of the stressed assets of commercial banks so that their books are cleaned up and more funds are unlocked for boosting economic growth.

Last week, the Union Finance Ministry informed Parliament that as of November 2024, the NARCL has acquired Rs 11,617 crore of bad debt from public sector banks against an original target of Rs 2 lakh crore set by the Union Cabinet in September 2021.

The ministry said: "Some of the accounts acquired by NARCL are under IBC and recovery is possible only after the resolution plan is approved by NCLAT."

Thus, in the remaining accounts, the NARCL has recovered a mere Rs 16.64 crore as of November 30, 2023.

There are also delays in IBC cases which take over a year just to get admitted in tribunals, while the resolution process stretches far beyond the 360-day timeline.

According to official figures, public sector banks wrote off over Rs 7 lakh crore worth of bad debt in five years between 2019 and 2023.

Against Rs 6.5 lakh crore worth of these stuck assets, Rs 94,000 crore or a mere 15 per cent has been recovered in 2023, with more than half of the recovered amount coming through the IBC route.

 
Print the Page
Add to Favorite
 
Share this on :
 

Please comment on this story:
 
Subject :
Message:
(Maximum 1500 characters)  Characters left 1500
Your name:
 

 
  Customs Exchange Rates
Currency Import Export
US Dollar
₹88.70
₹87
UK Pound
₹119.90
₹116
Euro
₹104.25
₹100.65
Japanese Yen ₹59.20 ₹57.30
As on 30 Oct, 2025
  Daily Poll
Who do you think will benefit more from the India - UK FTA in the long run?
 Indian businesses & consumers.
 UK businesses & consumers.
 Both will gain equally.
 The impact will be negligible for both.
  Commented Stories
 
 
About Us  |   Advertise with Us  
  Useful Links  |   Terms and Conditions  |   Disclaimer  |   Contact Us  
Follow Us : Facebook Twitter