New Delhi: A parliamentary standing committee has expressed its displeasure that there is no SC or ST member in the Board of Directors of the State Bank of India, noting that their representation must be provided in order to adequately safeguard their interests.
The standing parliamentary committee report was tabled in the Lok Sabha on Monday.
The committee which looked into the welfare of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes recommended that the matter may be taken up at a higher level to frame proper guidelines for due representation of eligible SC and ST members on the Board of Directors.
"For the purpose, the committee also recommends for concession/relaxation, if any required, for the purpose," the panel said.
"The committee expresses its displeasure over the fact that at present there is no SC/ST director in the Board of Directors of the SBI. The committee desperately feels that SC and ST representation in the Board of Directors must be provided in order to adequately safeguard the interests of SC/ST employees in the SBI," it said.
The committee also said it is "dismayed" to note that the State Bank of India, being the biggest nationalized bank in India, has no separate schemes for SCs/STs which constitute one-third of the country's population.
"The annexures provided by the bank indicate the percentage of share of SCs/STs in various schemes under the Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises(MSMEs) is very dismal. The share of SCs/STs ranges from 2 to 5 per cent and so on of the overall disbursal of loans under various schemes," it said.
The committee observes that the State Bank of India is the oldest commercial bank in the Indian sub-continent and out of a total strength of 2,43,330 employees, the percentage of SCs is 18.27 and of STs is 7.98.
"The committee is concerned to note that there are still 44 SC and 37 ST vacancies in different grades which remain to be filled," it said.
The committee said it recommends that these vacancies also should be filled at the earliest by the bank since the clerical or PO grades act as feeder grades for promotion to top managerial posts.
The panel also observed that a very high percentage of loan applications of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes are rejected.
The committee said the processing time should be minimised and stress should not be laid on too many documents and paperwork.
"The committee recommends that poverty-stricken SC/ST rural folk need the much needed financial impetus by the bank for growth and development and, hence, their loan applications should, as far as possible, be approved by calling the applicant and rectifying the deformities in the documents on the spot. A proper guideline to this effect may be formulated," it said.