PMO’S OFFICE TO INTERVENE
Who will be privatised? Who will be merged with whom ?
Dated 22.11.2025 : According to recent news reports, the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) is indeed set to convene a high-level meeting to discuss a comprehensive reform agenda for Public Sector Banks (PSBs), and merger proposals are expected to be on the table.
This meeting is considered highly significant as it follows the Finance Ministry’s “PSB Manthan” exercise and signals the highest level of political intent to push for the next wave of banking reforms ahead of the Union Budget for 2026-27.
Here is a breakdown of what is being reported:
1. Key Proposals on the PMO’s Agenda
The PMO meeting is expected to review proposals crafted by the Department of Financial Services (DFS), with the overarching goal of creating globally competitive Indian banks, specifically aiming for two Indian banks to rank among the world’s top 20.
The key reform proposals that are reportedly on the table include
Reform Area | Proposal | Rationale |
Bank Consolidation (Mergers) | A fresh round of consolidation strategies, potentially involving the merger of smaller PSBs (like Indian Overseas Bank, Central Bank of India, UCO Bank, and Bank of Maharashtra) with larger banks (like SBI, PNB, or BoB). | To create fewer, stronger entities with economies of scale, better risk management, and higher capacity for large-scale credit expansion (especially in infrastructure). |
Privatization | Potential revival of the plan to privatize two select PSBs (in addition to the ongoing IDBI Bank strategic sale). | To reduce government dependence, attract private capital, and enhance operational efficiency and governance. |
Operational Autonomy | Granting greater independence and freedom to the boards of PSBs in their decision-making processes. | To ensure professional management and agile decision-making, which the Finance Minister recently emphasized. |
FDI Limit Hike | A phased plan to raise the Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) limit in PSBs from the current 20% to 49%. | To help PSBs raise capital more easily from global markets and reduce their reliance on the government exchequer. |
2. Timeline and Next Steps
- Inter-Ministerial Consultations: These discussions are reportedly in their final stages.
- PMO Review: The PMO will examine the proposals shortly.
- Political Decisions: Key political decisions on the major reforms (including mergers and privatization) are expected to be taken closer to the Budget for 2026-27, with the implementation road map planned to be executed between 2026 and 2028
3. Mergers Discussion: A Resurfaced Topic
The PMO’s plan brings the topic of large-scale consolidation back to the forefront. While some officials previously indicated a pause on mergers after the “PSB Manthan,” the inclusion of “Bank Consolidation” in the PMO’s high-level agenda indicates that the long-term vision of reducing the number of PSBs to just three or four mega-banks is actively being revisited and deliberated at the highest administrative levels.
In conclusion, the PMO is indeed planning a high-stakes meeting to finalize the next phase of banking reforms, and merger proposals are a key item on that agenda
Bank privatization India debate has intensified after the FM’s DSE speech, even as AIBEA said a firm no to both privatization and PSB merger rumours.
AIBEA SAYS NO TO BOTH
08.11.2025 : The All India Bank Employees Association , the leading trade union of bank employees have opposed the move of Union Government of either merging or privatization of public sector banks . In a recent central committee meting held at Jaipur , it has noted the FM’s recent statement that the nationalisation of banks has not provided the desired results. She had also stated that the privatisation of banks would not hurt the nation. AIBEA took these statements as allegations against public sector banks and promoted the government‘s agenda of privatization.
AIBEA noted “ The Government is also advocating the theory of big banks meaning thereby that they want to go for further merger and consolidation of Banks. This is also a totally unwarranted move because experience shows that merger has not helped to improve business, rather the market share of PSBs have come down after the process of mergers. Experience also shows that mergers have resulted in closure of branches and thus shrinkage of banking services. Despite this, the Government is moving with their idea of merger of banks. “
Whether FM legitimizing Merger Rumours? Or is she batting for privatization ?
Dated 05.11.2025 : Finance Minister Mrs Nirmala Sitharaman delivered an address yesterday at the Delhi School of Economics (DSE), where she discussed both the history of bank nationalisation and the current drive for privatisation.
1. What the Finance Minister Said (The Statements)
FM Sitharaman’s remarks focused on creating a historical contrast between the past era of state control and the current professional approach.
- Critique of Nationalization (1969): She stated that the nationalization of banks in 1969, despite helping to push priority sector lending and government schemes, did not fully yield the desired results in terms of financial inclusion and, crucially, led to the system becoming unprofessional under state control.
- The Problem of Misuse: She specifically referred to the misuse of Public Sector Banks (PSBs) in the past, which resulted in the “twin balance sheet problem” (high NPAs in banks and over-leveraged corporates) around 2012-13, a problem that took nearly six years for the government to fix.
- Defense of Privatization: She strongly rejected the common apprehension that the privatization of state-owned banks would compromise financial inclusion or national interest.
- The Professionalism Argument: She asserted that after the government professionalized the banks (through reforms, consolidation, and cleaning up their balance sheets), the objectives of financial inclusion and credit growth are now being “beautifully achieved.”
- The New Mandate: She emphasized that when banks operate professionally and their decisions are board-driven, they can effectively serve “every objective of the national interest and also the banking interest.”
2. What the Statements Implied
The statements served to achieve two main goals:
- Justifying the Current Policy: By pointing to the failures and unprofessionalism of the nationalization era, the Minister sought to logically justify the current government’s policy of reducing its ownership in the banking sector.
- Dispelling Social Fears: Her reassurance that privatization (or strategic divestment) will not hurt financial inclusion (citing the success of the Jan Dhan accounts and current asset quality) aims to counter the long-standing political and social opposition, particularly from bank employee unions. The implication is that a well-run, professional, private entity can adhere to national mandates just as effectively, if not more so, than a politically controlled one.
3. Indication of a Policy Shift?
This is not an indication of a new policy shift, but rather public affirmation and defense of the existing, well-established policy.
- Policy Consistency: The government’s policy to privatize two PSBs (in addition to IDBI Bank) was announced in the 2021-22 Union Budget. Since then, all actions—the massive consolidation drive, the IDBI Bank strategic sale, and the plans for minority stake sales in smaller PSBs—have been consistent with this policy direction.
- Increased Resolve: The FM’s strong historical critique of nationalization and confident defense of privatization in a public lecture environment suggests a firming up of the government’s resolve to proceed with its disinvestment agenda. It provides the intellectual and philosophical backing for the practical steps being taken (like the appointment of advisors for stake sales and the final stages of IDBI Bank’s privatization).
In essence, the speech was a forceful argument that the era of state-controlled banking has led to inefficiencies and crises, and that a professional, board-driven banking system—regardless of ownership—is the best way to secure both economic growth and national objectives. This reaffirms the commitment to the privatization process already underway.
The Finance Minister’s statements regarding bank nationalization and the need for professional, board-driven banking give significant legitimacy to the ongoing strategic divestment (privatization) actions, but they actively discourage and undermine the current rumours about major mergers.
1. Legitimacy for Privatization (Strategic Divestment)
The statement strongly legitimizes the government’s existing policy of reducing its stake in PSBs:
- Critique of State Control: By labeling the post-nationalization system as “unprofessional” and prone to political misuse (leading to the NPA crisis), the Minister provided a powerful justification for moving away from majority state ownership.
- Defense of Professionalism: Her assertion that professional, board-driven banking achieves national objectives better implies that ownership (government vs. private) is less important than governance. This directly supports the move to privatize IDBI Bank and sell minority stakes in other PSBs, as the government is signaling it wants the banks to be run by professional boards accountable to all shareholders, not just the state.
- Policy Affirmation: The speech was a forceful political and intellectual defense of the current divestment actions, reinforcing that the government is committed to the strategic privatization process that is already underway.

2. Legitimacy for Mergers (Consolidation Rumours)
The statement provides no legitimacy to the rumours about a new round of large-scale mergers (like merging 12 PSBs down to 3) and actually points in the opposite direction:
- Focus on Professionalism, Not Scale: The Minister’s emphasis was on the need for each bank to be professionally run and board-driven, not on the need to drastically reduce their number through further consolidation.
- The Current Roadmap: The official and most recent policy, reiterated after the “PSB Manthan,” is to hold off on further large-scale mergers and instead focus on strengthening the existing 12 PSBs through technology and organic growth.
- Mergers vs. Divestment: Mergers are a tool for consolidation and reducing competition; privatization is a tool for changing ownership and improving governance. The government is currently prioritizing the governance change (privatization) over the structural change (merger), as evidenced by the immediate action plans for IDBI Bank and minority stake sales
Conclusion:
The Finance Minister’s speech was a clear endorsement and strengthening of the ongoing privatization agenda. It legitimizes the government’s move away from the nationalized model. Conversely, the emphasis on strengthening individual banks through professional governance and the current lack of action on mergers indicate that the social media rumours about an imminent, massive merger are unlikely to materialize under the current policy direction. However, we have to wait and see how the government makes its decisions and where it will end as there could be mismatches between actions and speeches
The article is based on the replies we got from a responsible AI app
- Ministry of Finance – https://finmin.gov.in
- Department of Financial Services – https://financialservices.gov.in
- RBI (banking circulars/speeches) – https://rbi.org.in
- AIBEA – https://aibea.in






Merger is better than the Privatisation for making sound big banks.
I presume that under this Merger plan decided by Government will be yeield good results as govt expected JAIHIND.