Public sector banks are losing huge sums and running up gargantuan bad debts. Defaulters like Vijay Mallya, once politically powerful, are fleeing abroad. India’s banking crisis is fundamentally political, not financial.
The left, predictably, blames wicked businessmen, saying the banking system has become a fiefdom of big business. Rubbish! The banks were indeed fiefdoms of big business before 1969. Then Indira Gandhi nationalized them to make them the fiefdoms of politicians. That’s the root of today’s crisis.
Indira and her socialist acolytes claimed bank nationalization was essential for the state to capture the commanding heights of the economy, and channel bank lending to top social priorities. Actually, she could have ordered private banks to lend to favoured sectors (as is done today) without nationalization.





Her real aim was to control all big finance, emasculating the businessmen and maharajas leading the Swatantra Party, the main opposition party after the 1967 election. She nullified the treaties Sardar Patel had signed with the princes to persuade them to accede to India in 1947. She abolished their privy purses and made them taxable, bankrupting them.