Dwindling deposits: The fall in deposit growth to the
lowest in half a century calls for urgent policy attention
For the
whole of last year, economy watchers fretted over sluggish credit offtake,
citing this as evidence of the lack of animal spirits among Indian businesses.
But just as green shoots have begun to spring up in the credit offtake numbers,
there’s a new metric to worry about — deposit inflows. Latest data from RBI
(end-March 2016) show aggregate deposit growth for banks at 9.9 per cent
year-on-year. This is the lowest level of deposit growth seen in the economy
since the 1960s. There’s no doubt a base effect at work here, as bank deposit
flows today are at many times the level in the sixties. Nevertheless, dwindling
deposit accretions are worrisome on three counts. One, if deposit inflows were
to dry up just as credit offtake is picking up, banks, which are already
liquidity-constrained, may find it hard to step up their lending to stimulate
the economy. Credit-deposit ratios are already tightening with deposit growth
(9.9 per cent) lagging credit growth (11.3 per cent). Two, it is unusual for
deposit accretions to slow down amid moderating inflation. With consumer price
inflation now at 5.2 per cent, we are in the midst of a rare phase where the
real returns on bank deposits are positive (1-year deposits offer 7-8 per cent).
Three, while it would be easy to attribute this slowdown in deposit inflows to
low income growth, the sharp 15 per cent jump in ‘currency with the public’
that is, liquid cash sloshing around in the economy, belies this.
A partial explanation for lower deposit flows could be that retail
savers have been shopping for financial instruments that offer better post-tax
returns, as banks pruned their deposit rates by 100 basis points or so in the
last one year. There’s only anecdotal evidence to support this. Small savings
schemes have raked in net flows of Rs. 49,500
crore in the first eight months of 2015-16. But this is a relatively small
proportion of annual bank deposit flows of Rs. 8-9
lakh crore. Mutual funds have attracted net flows of over Rs. 2 lakh crore, but the number isn’t much
changed from last year. Given that these statistics don’t entirely explain the
lower accretion to banks, the conclusion is that both households and businesses
have taken to stockpiling cash, even if it means a sacrifice on returns.
This is clearly an unhealthy sign. It could signal that all the adverse
news flow around banks and bad loans is beginning to take a toll on depositor
confidence. In this case, the Centre and the RBI need to urgently reach out to
the lay public with more confidence-building measures on behalf of banks. Or,
despite all the statistical evidence, the Indian public is taking the official
inflation numbers with a pinch of salt. In either case, it is clear that it is
premature for policymakers to take for granted the mild uptick in financial
savings witnessed in the past year. This is another factor for the RBI to
ponder, along with the other variables, as it weighs further easing in its
upcoming policy review.
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