Sunday, March 27, 2011

Succession planning 'important for Indian businesses’ - Dr.Y.V.Reddy

One of India's leading economists has spoken about the importance of effective succession planning for businesses in the country. Dr Y.V.Reddy, former Governor of the Reserve Bank of India, said corporate leaders have a duty to ensure that they leave their organisation in capable hands after stepping down. According to the Times of India, Dr Reddy made his comments during a recent conference entitled Leadership and Corporate Governance in Turbulent Times at the University of Hyderabad. He suggested India's traditional business models can lead to problems in succession planning because family members are often selected to replace an outgoing leader, regardless of their suitability for the role. "A good leader is one who is able to ensure there are better leaders after him," the expert commented. Dr Reddy became the 21st governor of India's central bank in 2003 and stepped down in September 2008, when he was succeeded in the role by Duvvuri Subbarao.

Banking services to all Indians by next year: RBI

Bank fined Rs 1 lakh for not complying with RBI guidelines

The Reserve Bank of India has imposed a penalty of Rs 1 lakh on Bhabhar Vibhag Nagrik Sahakari Bank Ltd (BVNSBL) in Gujarat for not complying with the guidelines on reporting financial transactions of over Rs 10 lakh. "The RBI has imposed a penalty of Rs 1 lakh on the Bhabhar Vibhag Nagrik Sahakari Bank Limited, of district Banaskantha," an official statement said. The bank had failed to follow RBI's instructions on maintenance of records of cash transactions of over Rs 10 lakh, and reporting them to Financial Intelligence Unit-India. BVNSBL had earlier been served a show-cause notice by the apex bank. After it submitted a reply, the penalty was imposed, an RBI official said.

Jammu & Kashmir Bank’s subsidiary receives RBI approval

Jammu & Kashmir Bank???s subsidiary - JKB Financial services has been permitted by RBI that in addition to stock broking services it can undertake the following activities of Depository Services and Collection of Utility Bills.  Further RBI has also permitted the banks subsidiary to enter into distribution of Life & Non-Life Insurance, Mutual Funds and Credit Cards. Recently, the State Government has overdrawn Rs 2,300 crores from Jammu and Kashmir Bank (J&K) in the form of outstanding overdraft (OD) facility. In accordance with the recommendations of the 13th Finance Commission and with the help of union finance ministry the liability will be wiped out in one go. The outstanding overdraft amount would be paid soon to the bank.  Jammu and Kashmir Bank has a pan-India presence through its network of 556 branches, out of which 344 branches are located in semi-urban and rural areas. It also includes extension counters and service branches. The bank has a network of 212 ATMs which is the largest ATM network in J&K. It is the only bank in private sector that has been designated as agent of RBI for banking.

Only 500 in Nagpur turn off their lights!

NAGPUR: A city with a population of more than 35 lakhs, but only 500 seemed to have woken up to the reality of Earth Hour. A little more than 500 people from Orange City shut their bulbs, fans, TVs, computers, etc to observe Earth Hour on Saturday at 8.30pm. Evidently the response is very poor but environmentalists see light in the darkness as they feel in future these 500 people will spread the message and the vision of Earth Hour will be realized. Environmentalist and a founder of NGO Green Vigil Kaustav Chatterje and his 35 members visited many areas to create awareness among Nagpurians to observe 'Earth Hour' by switching off lights. Subsequently, around 200 flat owners residing in many apartments including Bhavishyati, Jaika, Hemchandra, Prestige and Utkarsh (Anuradha) from Civil Lines area observed the cause.   Similarly, Green Vigil members, who also campaigned in Mahal, Nandanwan, Manewada, Kamptee, Kanhan, Vaishali Nagar, Motibagh and Institute of Science's girls' hostel also participated.  Kavita Chatterje, another member of Green Vigil said that the Earth Hour was a global initiative by WWF ( World Wide Fund for Nature) that aimed to send out the message that people are concerned about climate change and that policymakers should make it their topmost priority.  She claimed that the members also urged the shop owners to at least turn off the lights of their hoardings or banners.  Shakti Rattan, retired RBI official and administrative head of the NGO, pointed out that every citizen should participate in this campaign. He further explained that there are thousands of countries, many religions, but there is only one Earth. "Hence, irrespective of caste and creed, people should come forward to save the Mother Earth," he said.

The ‘real’ truth behind Yunus’ Grameen story

The feud in Bangladesh between Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and Mohammed Yunus, the founder of the microloan-making  Grameen Bank and a winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, is being portrayed as a modern-day replay of the famous battle between the wicked Kauravas and the virtuous Pandavas in the "Mahabharata".  The suggestion is that a vindictive prime minister is playing politics in punishing the saintly Yunus, the man who pioneered microfinance, for having threatened to enter politics. Sheikh Hasina is even being compared to Russia's Vladimir Putin in his campaign against the oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky.  But the Grameen case is more complicated, and carries a moral contrary to what Yunus' wellmanaged public-relations campaign suggests.  First, Sheikh Hasina is no ordinary politician. She is the daughter of the first president of Bangladesh , Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, a charismatic leader often described as the Father of the Nation, who was assassinated in August 1975 by the army.   Hasina won office in 2009 after a landslide victory in an election that was free from fraud. She is also one of the few women to have gained the premiership not by inheriting it, but in her own right, long after her parents and some of her siblings were murdered. Sheikh Hasina escaped the massacre of her family only because she was in Germany at the time. Over many years, she patiently worked her way back into, and to the top of, Bangladeshi politics.   Moreover, Sheikh Hasina has gained political power at the polls in an Islamic country, which is no mean feat for a woman. By getting the US to side with Yunus against the Bangladeshi prime minister, secretary of state Hillary Clinton seems guilty of arrogantly intervening in the domestic affairs of a friendly, democratic government —in direct contradiction of President Barack Obama's preferred modus operandi.   Second, many of those now discounting Sheikh Hasina's credentials are guilty of inflating those of Yunus. Consider the frequent refrain that Yunus is the "pioneer" of the microfinance movement. In fact, the true pioneer of microfinance is a remarkable woman from Ahmedabad , Ela Bhatt, a follower of Gandhi who established SEWA (Self-Employed Women's Association ) as a bank in April 1974, two years before Yunus founded his Grameen Bank Project in Jobra, Bangladesh.  Throughout its existence, SEWA has been regulated by the Reserve Bank of India, staying strictly within the law and seeking no special dispensations. Unlike the Grameen Bank, it has received no foreign money (such as the grant of $100 million from Norway, the handling of which led to the initial charges of malfeasance against Yunus), and it has distributed dividends of 9-12 % annually each year since its founding. Yunus is suspected of covering up losses at Grameen with huge sums of money from abroad, whereas SEWA has demonstrated that poor, self-employed women can own and run a financial body in a self-sustained fashion without external largesse.  Third, many Bangladeshis, jealous of the independence they secured in the crucible of the Pakistani army's genocide in East Pakistan 40 years ago, resent the vast influx of foreign money , which has turned Grameen and Yunus almost into a rival to the democratically elected government, a phenomenon that no government would tolerate. Indeed, Clinton's intervention in the feud between Yunus and Sheikh Hasina highlights the danger of foreign influence in Bangladesh's internal affairs.  Finally, there is the issue of microfinance itself . Microlending is certainly a useful supplement to tested anti-poverty policy instruments —and one that pays an extra dividend insofar as it aids women. But the fact is that India's massive economic reforms, which began in earnest in 1991, have had a far greater impact on poverty , and indeed on the incomes of several disadvantaged groups, including women. This has been amply documented by recent empirical studies, which have shown that earlier assertions to the contrary were wrong.  By contrast, Bangladesh has not experienced anything like India's acceleration in economic growth. As Sheikh Hasina has seemed to appreciate since returning to office two years ago, Bangladesh has for decades been handicapped by doctrines that undermine growth. Unfortunately, Bangladesh's most influential economists, and hence the country's policies, remain mired in the growth-killing socialist economics that they learned at Cambridge and the London School of Economics a half-century ago.  Ela Bhatt's SEWA adds to the huge benefits to the poor and underprivileged that a reformed macroeconomic policy framework has brought to India. By contrast, Yunus's Grameen Bank puts at best a microeconomic finger in the leaky dyke of Bangladesh's largely unreformed macroeconomic policies. Can we hope that the Grameen affair will be a prelude to the fight for the liberal reforms that will transform the Bangladeshi economy?
(The writer is professor of economics and law at Columbia University and senior fellow in international economics at the Council on Foreign Relations)

`With high growth, you get an additional amount of inflation...If I had to bet on growth, I would bet on 9 per cent' - Kaushik Basu

Credit-counselling centre opened at Perumbavoor

The Union Bank of India, the lead bank of Ernakulam district, has set up the first financial-literacy and credit-counselling centre in the district at Perumbavoor. D. Subbarao, Governor, Reserve Bank of India (RBI), recently visited the centre, accompanied by Suma Varma, Regional Director of the apex bank in Thiruvananthapuram. M.V. Nair, Chairman and Managing Director of the Union Bank, and Mayank Mehta, Regional Head, were present. Such centres, recommended by a high-power committee headed by Usha Thorat, former RBI Deputy Governor, on the lead-bank scheme, are being set up in every district to provide counselling through face-to-face interaction or e-mail, mobile phone, fax and other media. Special stress is being laid on educating people in rural and urban areas on various financial products and services available from the formal financial sector and making them aware of the advantages of connecting with the sector. Ideas are disseminated for formulating debt-restructuring plans for borrowers in distress and recommending them to formal financial institutions, including cooperatives, for consideration and taking up such activity that promote financial literacy, awareness of banking services, financial planning and amelioration of debt-related distress of individuals.

Innovation in Banking – what’s going to change in the next 5 years