Source: BS
Context:
Following a draft consultation period earlier this year, the RBI has finalized revised lending norms for UCBs. The objective is twofold: providing operational flexibility to larger, financially sound banks while imposing stricter risk management on smaller ones to prevent systemic contagion.
Revised Unsecured Lending Framework
The RBI has shifted the ceiling for unsecured loans from a percentage of total assets to a percentage of total advances, doubling the effective limit for many banks.
- Aggregate Limit: UCBs can now maintain aggregate unsecured loans up to 20% of their total advances (previously 10% of total assets).
- The ECBA Exemption: For UCBs meeting the Eligibility Criteria for Business Authorisation (ECBA), unsecured advances up to ₹50,000 per borrower (classified as Priority Sector Loans) are excluded from this 20% limit.
- Individual Caps (Tier-based):
| UCB Tier | Individual Unsecured Loan Limit |
| Tier-I | Up to ₹5 Lakh |
| Tier-II | Up to ₹7.5 Lakh |
| Tier-III & Tier-IV | Up to ₹10 Lakh |
Tightened Housing Loan Norms
The new rules distinguish between “Ready-to-move-in” and “Under-construction” properties to ensure better liquidity management.
- Tenure Cap (Tier-I & II): Capped at 20 years, which must include any moratorium period.
- Moratorium Restrictions:
- Allowed only for under-construction properties.
- Capped at a maximum of 24 months (or 18 months as per some specific draft variations; the final rule emphasizes construction-linked timelines).
- Prohibited for the purchase of completed (ready) houses.
- Flexibility for Large UCBs: Tier-III and Tier-IV banks have the autonomy to decide tenures and moratoriums based on Board-approved policies, provided they account for borrower life expectancy.
Key Concepts: Keyword Q&A
Q: What is the “ECBA” Framework?
A: It stands for Eligibility Criteria for Business Authorisation. It replaced the old “FSWM” (Financially Sound and Well Managed) norms. To qualify, a UCB needs a Net NPA $\le 3\%$, consistent profits, and no default in CRR/SLR.
Q: Why separate Tiers for UCBs?
A: UCBs are categorized based on deposit size (Tier 1 < ₹100cr; Tier 2 up to ₹1,000cr; Tier 3 up to ₹10,000cr; Tier 4 > ₹10,000cr). Tiered regulation ensures that a small neighborhood bank isn’t burdened with the same complex rules as a multi-state cooperative giant.
Q: What is a “Nominal Member”?
A: These are members who don’t have full voting rights but can avail of small loans (like consumer durable loans up to ₹2.5 Lakh) if the bank’s by-laws allow it.
Conceptual MCQs
Q1. According to the final RBI guidelines, what is the aggregate ceiling for unsecured loans for a UCB?
A) 10% of Total Assets
B) 20% of Total Advances
C) 50% of Priority Sector Lending
D) 15% of Net Worth
Q2. A Tier-II UCB wants to provide a housing loan for a ready-to-move-in apartment. What is the maximum permitted moratorium period?
A) 12 months
B) 24 months
C) 6 months
D) Nil (Zero)
Q3. UCBs are barred from extending loans against which of the following?
A) Gold Ornaments
B) Fixed Deposits of other banks
C) Life Insurance Policies
D) Their own Fixed Deposits
Answers: Q1: B | Q2: D | Q3: B
Exam Relevance
| Exam Focus Area | Relevance Level |
| UPSC GS-3 | Economy: Mobilization of resources and Banking structure |
| RBI Grade B | FM: Cooperative Banking and Risk Management |
| NABARD | Rural/Urban Cooperative Credit Societies |





