SOPS LIKELY
FOR URBAN COOPERATIVE BANKS
Tax deduction
on bad loan provisioning proposed. The finance ministry may introduce a
proposal in Budget 2008-09 to allow urban cooperative banks to get tax
deductions up to a specified limit for the amount they set aside as provisions
for bad loans. According to a North Block source, the Reserve Bank of India
has suggested that deductions for bad loan provisioning be allowed up to an
amount not exceeding 10 per cent of urban cooperatve
banks' average advances, based on a certain formula. Commercial banks currently
get a similar deduction for their rural branches. The move, sources said, is
being considered principally in the interests of financial inclusion. Urban
cooperative banks serve the middle class, lower middle class and urban poor and
the offset would encourage them to lend more to such people. "Considering
that they take a higher risk by lending to the poor, such an incentive may be
extended to the urban cooperatives," sources said. Regulatory norms are
also much stiffer for urban cooperative banks than their commercial
counterparts. Cooperatives are mandated to extend 60 per cent of advances to
the priority sector compared with 40 per cent for commercial banks. Similarly,
urban cooperative banks have to direct 25 per cent of their priority sector
lending towards weaker sections of society. Sources said that given that urban
cooperatives are not permitted to access the capital market to raising
resources, there was a need to helping them improve cash flows. For funds,
urban cooperative banks rely on members' contributions and profits ploughed
back into business. There are about 1,850 urban cooperative banks in India
and the cooperative banking sector accounts for about 5 per cent of total
deposits and advances of the banking system. Urban cooperative banks manage
deposits of around Rs 1,12,240
crore and have advances of Rs
70,300 crore. - www.business-standard.com