India’s Top Banker Must Ease Credit, But Not Too Much

Sanjay Malhotra, the new Reserve Bank of India governor, is right to unwind some of his predecessor’s hawkish controls on a runaway consumer-credit boom. There was a time to throw sand in the wheels of commerce. Right now, though, a sputtering growth engine needs lubrication.

Still, Malhotra must be cautious. There is a crack in the structure of the world’s fastest-growing major economy. Speeding up subprime loans could be risky down the road.

Effective April 1, banks will set aside less capital on loans to better-rated nonbanking financial companies. The monetary authority has also lowered the risk weights on microfinance loans for consumer credit to 100%, restoring them to their pre-November-2023 levels. Back then, Shaktikanta Das, the former RBI chief, had raised the weights to 125%.

The capital thus freed up could fuel banks’ own lending. The sharp downtrend in their advances to shadow lenders — who ultimately serve less creditworthy borrowers — should also reverse.

Both of those outcomes will be timely. Gross domestic product may have grown 6.5% in the year that ends March 31, according to the government’s estimates, slowing from 9.2% in the previous 12 months. The next year’s forecast doesn’t herald much of a pickup, either.