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Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
Lecture
# 19
ROLE
OF COMMERCIAL BANKING
(xi)LegalReforms
Legaldifficulties
and time delays in recovery of
defaulted loanshave been
removedthrough
a
new ordinance i.e.
TheFinancial Institutions
(Recovery of Finances)
Ordinance,2001.
Thenew
recovery laws
ensuresexpeditious recovery of
stuck up loans by the right
of
foreclosure
and sale of mortgaged
propertywith or without
intervention of court and
automatictransfer
of case to executionproceeding. A
BankingLaws
ReformsCommission
is
reviewing, revising, and
consolidatingthe banking
laws and drafting new laws
such as
bankruptcylaw.
(xii)Taxation
Thecorporate
tax rates on banks were
exorbitantly high in Pakistan thus
adverselyaffecting
theirprofitability
and attractiveness as an avenue for
investment and new equity
injection.
TheGovernment
has already reduced the tax
rate from 58 percent to 44 percent
duringthe
lastthree
years and it is envisaged that the rate will be
reduced gradually and brought at
par
withthe
corporate tax rate of 35 percent in
the next three years. This
will in turn help in
reducingthe
spread between the deposit rate and
lending rate and benefitfinancial
savers.
(xiii)AgricultureCredit
A
complete revamping of
AgricultureCredit Scheme has
been done recently with
thehelp
of
commercial banks. The scope
of the Scheme which was
limited to production
loansfor
inputshas
been broadened to thewhole
value chain of agriculture
sector.
We
have, with the grace of
Allah, become a
surpluscountry in foodgrains,
livestocketc. and
thusthe
needs of agriculture sector have also
expanded. The SBPhas
included financingfor
silos,godowns,
refrigerated vans, agro processing and
distribution under thecover
of this
scheme.This
broadening of the scope as
well the
removal
of other restrictions have enabled
the commercial banks to
increasetheir lending
foragriculture
by a multiple of fourtimes compared to FY
1999-00
thusmainstreaming
agriculturelending
as part of theircorporate business.
Unlike theprevious years
whenthey
wereprepared
to pay penaltiesfor under
performance theyhave set up
higher targets for
this
year.The
private commercial banks have also
agreed to step in and increase
their lending to
agriculture.
(xiv)E-Banking
The
banks are being encouraged to
movetowards Electronic
banking.There is a big
surge
amongthe
banks including NCBs to upgrade their
technology and on-linebanking
services.
Duringthe
last three years there is a
large expansion in the ATMs
has been witnessed and
at
present
about 500 ATMs are
nowworking throughout
thecountry. The
decisionmandating
the
banks to join one of either two ATM
switches available in
thecountry will provide
a
furtherboost.
Progress in creatingautomated or
on-line branches of banks has been
quite
significant
so far and it is expected that by 2004 a
majority of the bank branches will be
on-
line
or automated.
Utilitybills
payment
and remittances would be
handledthrough ATMs,
Kiosks
or Personal Computers reducing
bothtime and cost.
Investment in information
technology
is being undertaken by the banks to
enhance efficiency, reduce
transactioncosts
and
promote E-Commerce. It
hasbeen estimated that a
bankingtransaction through
ATM
costs
one fourth as much a
transactionconducted over
the counter in a traditional
branch
61
Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
and
the similar transaction
overthe internet costs a
mere fractionof
the traditionalteller
costs.
(xv)HumanResources
The
banks have recently embarked on merit-based
recruitment to build up
theirhuman
resource
base an area which
hasbeen neglected so far.
Theprivate banks have taken
lead
in
this respect by
holdingcompetitive examinations,
interviews and selecting the
most
qualified
candidates. The era of appointment on
the basis of sifarish and
nepotism has come
to
an end. This new generation
of bankers will usher in a culture of
professionalism and
rigour
in the banking industry and
produce bankers of stature who will
provide the
leadership
in the future.
(xvi)CreditRating
To
facilitate the depositors to make
informed judgments
aboutplacing their savings
withthe
banks,
it has been made
mandatoryfor all banks to get
themselvesevaluated by
creditrating
agencies.
These ratings are then disclosed to
the general public by
theSBP and also
disseminated
to the Chambers of Commerce and Trade
bodies. Such public disclosure
will
allowthe
depositors to choose betweenvarious
banks. For example, those who
wish to get
higherreturn
may opt for banks with B or
C rating. But those who want
to play safemay
decide
to stick with only AAA or AA rated
banks.
(xvii)Supervision and
Regulatory Capacity
Thebanking
supervision and regulatorycapacity of
the Central Bankhas
beenstrengthened.
Merit
based recruitment, competency
enhancing training, performance
linked
promotion,technology
driven process,induction of
skilled humanresources and
greater
emphasis
on values such as
integrity,trust, team work
havebrought about a
structural
transformation
in the character of
theinstitution. The
responsibilityfor supervision of
non-
bankfinance
companies has beenseparated and
transferred to
SecuritiesExchange
Commission.The
SBP itself hasbeen
divided into two parts one
looking aftercentral
banking
and the other after
retailbanking for
thegovernment.
(xviii)PaymentSystems
Finally,the
country's payment
systeminfrastructure is being
strengthened to provide
convenience
in transfer of payments to
thecustomers. The Real-Time
Gross Settlement
(RTGS)system
will process largevalue and
critical transactions on real
time while
electronicclearing
systems will be established in
allcities.
These
reforms will go a long way in
further strengthening
theBanking sector but a
vigilant
supervisoryregime
by the State Bank will help
steer the
futuredirection.
CommercialBanking
in a FreeSociety
Although
we can say a great deal about
theinstitutions of a free
society, and why they
are
desirable,
speculating about
thespecific ways in which
people will choose to organize
themselveswithin
such institutions is always a
trickymatter
·
Afterall,
the whole justificationfor
the institutions of a free
society is thatonly
throughits
institutions can human beings discover
progressively betterways of
dealing with
scarcity(of
both goods and
knowledge)
·
and
thus improve both
ourmaterial and non-material
welfare.Our ignorance of
the
details
of a free society is precisely why
having a free society is so
important.
62
Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
Thebanking
industry is especiallysuited
for just thiskind of
analysis. If we want to
know
whatcommercial
banking mightlook like in a
free society, we need only
turn to
contemporaryregulation
and the historicalrecord to
begin to piecetogether a
coherent
story.
PrivateDeposit
Insurance
·
Banks
in a free society
mightchoose to purchase privately
supplied deposit
insurance
as a way to reassure
customers.They might also
enter intointerbank mutual
aid
agreements,
or be insured
throughclearinghouses.
·
Historically,
banks have used these and
other methods to conveytrust
to customers.
Before
deposit insurance banks would
advertisetheir balance sheets and
listthe members of
theirboards
of directors.
·
Providingthis
kind of information was a way to
establish theirtrustworthiness
to
actual
and potential depositors. With deposit
insurance, banks need not do
this.
·
It
is reasonable to expect that banks in a
free society will use
theseways, and
discovernew
and imaginative ones, of creating
the trust on whichall
banking systems rest.
·
Banks
in a free society will be
literallynothing special. What
makesbanking so un-
freetoday
is that banks are treated differently
from otherbusiness
enterprises.
·
Therule
of law that
wouldcharacterize a free
societywould demand that banks
be
treated
no differently than
otherfirms. If they
arefraudulent or use
force,then they need
to
face
the consequences.
Otherwise,any sort of
voluntaryarrangement banks make
with
customers
will be allowed.
·
Theresult
will not only be a more free
banking system,but a more
efficient,safe,
and
productive one.
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