KEY POINTS
  • Earlier this month, Piyush Goyal, India's interim finance minister, revealed plans to set up an Asset Reconstruction Company or a "bad bank" aimed at absorbing the 9.5 trillion rupee bad debt in state-owned banks.
  • But experts said the plan may not be enough to fix India's bad debt problems.
  • A "bad bank" also wouldn't be able to fix another problem in the system: India’s weak judiciary.

Experts say the Indian government’s latest plan may not be enough to fix its bad debt problems.

Earlier this month, Piyush Goyal, India's interim finance minister, revealed plans to set up an Asset Reconstruction Company or a "bad bank" aimed at absorbing the 9.5 trillion rupee bad debt in state-owned banks. Doing so would allow those banks to stay afloat by resetting their balance sheets.