Ganguly panel for reducing interest rate on foreign banks'' deposits with SIDBI
By Our Banking Bureau | 28 May 2004
SIDBI offers foreign banks 6 per cent rate of interest on one-year deposits. This is higher than the market rate of 4.5-5 per cent and therefore does not serve to penalise the banks that do not meet the lending targets, explained a SIDBI official.
The interest rate payable by SIDBI to foreign banks on priority sector lending shortfall deposits, may be pegged at a rate which does not act as an incentive for the foreign banks to keep the deposit with SIDBI, rather than directly meeting the credit needs of the SME sector, said the report submitted by the working group. The working group has also made a case to increase the term of these deposits from one year to three years in order to enable SIDBI to better manage the long-term loans it disburses to the SME sector.
The working group constituted following a statement in the November 2003 Credit Policy has suggested a uniform target in priority sector lending (including SSI) at 40 per cent of net bank credit for all domestic and foreign banks so as to ensure a level playing field and faster development of the sector.
At present, domestic banks have to lend 40 per cent of their net bank credit to priority sector while foreign banks have to meet only a lower figure of 32 per cent.