Friday, May 10, 2013

From class banking to mass banking

On July 19, 1969, 14 private banks were nationalised in India. Over four decades later, the ruling Congress party continues to bask in the legacy of Indira Gandhi and her crucial decision that changed banking in India
The decision by the central government to nationalise 14 private sector banks in July 1969 is often cited as a defining moment for India. Arguably the most important economic decision taken by any Indian government since 1947, its impact – political, social and economic – is something that even the reforms of 1991 cannot compare to. In fact, it was because of this decision that Indian banks emerged relatively unharmed from the recent global financial crisis.

The road to this social control of banks, however, wasn’t constructed overnight. Although the idea of social control of banks emerged in 1967, the Economic Programme Committee of the All India Congress Committee (AICC) in its report in 1948 had already strongly recommended that banking and insurance should be nationalised as part of a total package for establishing “a just social order”. The matter, however, rested for a decade and a half until the political climate called for it.

The reasons behind this decision, by the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, were dictated both by economics and politics. In January 1966, when Indira Gandhi ascended to power with the help of the ‘Syndicate’ of older and more established Congress leaders (K. Kamaraj, S. Nijalingappa, Nilam Sanjiva Reddy, Atulya Ghosh, Srinivas Mallya, S. K. Patil among others), India was besieged by several problems.

Severe droughts had brought down the crop yield, prices had shot up by 16% and US food aid was heavily dictated by geopolitics. A foreign exchange crisis was brewing with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) demanding that India devalue its currency. On a separate front, the country flared up with identity politics in Punjab and Haryana, inter-state feuds between Karnataka and Maharashtra over the newly independent Goa, anti-Hindi agitation in Tamil Nadu and tribal troubles threatening peace in the north eastern states


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
 
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