SBI Rs 7,000 crore loan 'write off' not a loan waiver: Arun Jaitley
As a controversy arose over SBI reportedly writing off loans worth Rs 7,000 crore including that of Vijaya Mallya promoted Kingfisher Airlines, government and the bank today maintained that there was no loan waiver and the liability on the borrowers still remains.
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New Delhi: As a controversy arose over SBI reportedly writing off loans worth Rs 7,000 crore including that of Vijaya Mallya promoted Kingfisher Airlines, government and the bank today maintained that there was no loan waiver and the liability on the borrowers still remains.
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley asked opposition members in the Rajya Sabha not to go by the literal meaning of write-off.
"So there is a little bit of malapropism involved in this. Don't go by literal meaning write-off. Write-off does not mean loan waiver. Loan still remains. You still continue to pursue," he said.
He was intervening during a debate in the house on the government's demonetisation action.
Jaitley was replying to CPM leader Sitaram Yechury who referred to a newspaper report which said SBI wrote off loans of wilful defaulters including Rs 1,200 crore of Kingfisher Airlines. However, the member did not take any names. Congress leader Anand Sharma had also raised the issue in his speech.
The minister said: "It (write-off) does not mean that the loan ceases to be a loan. We will still chase the loan. The entry in the book changes that is from being performing assets, it become a non-performing (asset)."
Without specifically referring to the Kingfisher case, the Finance Minister said, this loan was restructured when another government was in power.
"This is the only loan for which second restructure was wanted by that government. So, we inherited a terrible legacy. But only in the accounting book, the performing assets becomes non-performing that's all. Otherwise the liability to pay and right to recover still remains," he said.
SBI Chairman Arundhati Bhattacharya also sought to downplay reports of loan write-off of 63 wilful defaulters saying that they have been clubbed under a different head and efforts are on to recover loans from such defaulters.
SBI, the leader of the consortium of 17 banks, has taken physical possession of many properties including Goa's plush Kingfisher Villa. The auction by the bank failed to attract any bidder.
"These are not write offs. They are old entries done over time. We have fully provided for these loans so they are put into an account called Accounts Under Collection. There is a very robust process for following up all these loans for recovery including monthly review by management and quarterly review by board,
"No let off of borrowers happened and all processes are focused for full recovery. The words "write off" are technical terms and used in the layman's way of understanding these words is completely misleading," she told PTI.
In July, SBI had expressed inability to divulge details of loans given to Vijay Mallya and his now defunct Kingfisher Airlines in response to an RTI query, holding that the matter is sub-judice and being looked into by investigating agencies.
As per the latest published quarterly numbers, SBI had written off loans worth Rs 6,060 crore at the end of September while it was Rs 4,613 crore at the end of the first quarter of the current financial year.
Collectively, the bank has written off Rs 10,673 crore in the first half of the current fiscal.
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