Ila Patnaik, Columnist

India Shortchanges Its Banks

Politics and fear-mongering have doomed a key reform. 

The government's sending taxpayer money down the drain.

Photographer: Anindito Mukherjee/Bloomberg

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India needs a strategy to get the government out of banking. Non-performing loans among state-owned banks — a legacy of India’s socialist past which account for nearly 70 percent of deposits — have crossed 5 percent of GDP. The central bank has restricted lending at 11 of them and forced one, IDBI Bank Ltd., to sell itself to the government-owned Life Insurance Corporation of India.

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