Maharashtra Government indemnifying bankers in infrastructure project funding

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of Maharashtra considering indemnifying bankers in infrastructure project funding
of Maharashtra considering indemnifying bankers in- indian Bureaucracy

With huge infrastructure projects underway in Maharashtra, the state government is looking at restructuring its funding model so that bankers who are willing to fund projects will be covered by the government. This will form part of the agreement that they sign with the developers. This was disclosed by Mr Ashish Kumar Singh, Principal Secretary, PWD, Govt of Maharashtra, at a panel discussion during day two of FICCI-IBA Annual Banking Conference- FIBAC 2017, being held in the city. The session, titled ‘Infrastructure Finance 2.0 and Future of Development Funding’, was moderated by Mr Ashish Garg, Partner and Director, Boston Consulting Group. Other panellists included Mr M S Mahabaleshwara, MD and CEO, Karnataka Bank; Mr Venkat Nageswar Chalasani, DMD – Global Markets, State Bank of India; Mr Ajay Mahajan, Head, Wholesale Banking, IDFC Bank; and Mr Madhu Terdal, Group CFO, GMR Group.

“Infrastructure is becoming bigger, varied and complex,” declared Mr Garg in his opening remarks. Setting the tone for the discussion, he asked the panellists whether the finance space has enough bandwidth for private and risk capital. In the wake of a number of policy initiatives by the government, he asked whether the financial sector is ready with products and structures that can address and take advantage of the changes in policy. He also wondered how to “make sure what we are investing in today is future-ready.”
Mr Singh felt that while the state is ready to deliver, it will need developers, bankers and
lawyers to get together to make it happen successfully. He observed that a lot of infrastructure
projects are funded by NBFCs with a short-term view.
Mr Mahabaleshwara described Infrastructure 2.0 as a national asset. He called upon the
banking community to learn from the bottlenecks of version 1.0. He pointed out that there are
now new avenues for funding infrastructure projects over the next 30-40 years. There are large
projects on the anvil, and the money for the projects is already arranged by the government.
Citing the recently-commissioned bullet train project, he observed, “The money is already
there. But what about men and material? The material has to be manufactured and produced
in India. This is where the economy will grow.” He suggested that just as ECGC regulates export
credit, the government should consider instituting an Infrastructure Credit Guarantee
Corporation (ICGC). This will encourage banks to “be more adventurous.” This is especially
since there are good opportunities, but bankers are not in a position to take responsibility.
Mr Chalasani reminded the house that State Bank of India has a presence in every component
of infrastructure projects. “Rupee loans, foreign currency loans, rupee bonds, dollar bonds,” he
said, are all within its ambit. He informed that they have a subsidiary that prepares projects,
guides and syndicates loans. They are also working on credit enhancement of companies. “We
are playing an active role in the entire cycle.”

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