The man who made home loans possible in India
younger readers of business papers might have barely paid attention to the full page notice by HDFC to honour its founder last week.
The bright-eyed smiling man, whose picture was at the centre of that
page, is virtually unknown to people now in their 20s or 30s.
Those
who work in or around Churchgate in Mumbai may have made the connection
between the photo of H T Parekh and the street named after him in that
area.
It is ironic that in a time when even moderate business
success leads to people being lionized in the media -- a visionary of
the pre-liberalization era has almost been forgotten.
It is a
reflection on both the quality of intellectual life of Mumbai's
business world and on those who inherited Parekh's legacy that almost
two decades after he died there has been no biography of the man, nor a
memorial lecture nor an academic chair instituted in his name.
Perhaps the centenary year of his birth might serve as an impetus to make amends.
On March 10, 2011, H T Parekh, or HTP as he was often called, would
have been a hundred years old. Why does the birth centenary of HTP call
for our attention? Why are this man's life and strivings relevant to
the present?
First and foremost, because -- as he often said --
while he spent his entire working life in service of Lakshmi, the
goddess of wealth, he felt more devoted to Saraswati, goddess of
learning and wisdom. This was evident in the simple life-style he lived
as well as in his engagement with ideas and values.
Secondly, he acted on the conviction that the stock market could be a powerful tool for economic democracy.
Thus, HTP founded the Housing Development and Finance Corporation
(HDFC), back in 1977, and for the first time made it possible for
salary-earning, middle-class Indians to become home owners long before
retirement.
And he did this a decade-and-a-half before liberalization.
As Dr Nita Mukherjee, the editor of a two-volume publication of
selections from HTP's writings, said last week: "Every newly employed
person who walks away with a home loan
sanction today in 24 hours ought to say a prayer of gratitude to HTP.
That's because he proved that successful mortgage finance was possible."
He made a paradigm-shifting contribution at a time when Indian banks
could not give loans for housing, either to an individual or to a
builder because housing was not deemed to be an 'industry'.
HTP
belonged to that charmed generation of highly qualified young people
who were in the prime of life when India gained Independence.
A
graduate of Wilson College, Mumbai and London School of Economics, HTP
started out as a stock broker at Harkisondass Lukhmidass.
In 1953
he joined the Industrial Credit and Investment Corporation of India,
now better known as ICICI, as a deputy general manager. He rose to
become managing director and executive chairman of ICICI.
While he
acknowledged the spirit of 'bazaar' banking imbibed from his father HTP
said that the much deeper influences in his life were his mother "the
stamp of her self-effacing character" and Gandhiji's values and
philosophy.
Setting up HDFC in 1977 was a post-retirement
undertaking. It was the realization of a dream he had nurtured since
the early 1950s -- when he first drafted a proposal for a housing loans
company that would serve the middle class.
The idea of lending
against future incomes was, at that time, quite revolutionary -- since
six-digit monthly salaries were virtually unknown.
HTP set up a
first-world level service for home loans at a time when Indians waited
for years before getting a telephone or gas connection -- or even a
Bajaj scooter or Fiat car.
As early as 1960, HTP made a case for
introducing mutual funds in India. It bothered him that 13 years after
Independence India had only 5 lakh (500,000) investors in the capital
markets.
It has to be realized" wrote HTP, "that mere creation of
institutional agencies does not expand a country's capital market. The
real backbone of the market is the individual investor."
It is
unlikely that when he wrote these lines in 1960 HTP could have
visualised today's net-savvy individual day trader making speculative
forays into the stock market.
For him the stock market was not a source of either cheap funds for industry or get-rich-quick gambles for individual traders.
"He viewed it more as a way of economic democracy-so that the ordinary
Indians' savings could be gainfully employed in industrialisation and
they could benefit from the gains of entrepreneurship" wrote Mukherjee
in a tribute last week.
In the wake of the Harshad Mehta scam in
1993, HTP was disturbed but as a passionate optimist his attention was
more closely focused on the fact that an increasing number of Indians
who were entering the stock market -- which he saw as a form of
empowerment.
By then HTP was fully retired and his health was often
uncertain. But his mind remained razor sharp and his dreams were
focused on a still higher aspiration -- South East Asian unity.
As
early as 1962 when even the idea of a European common market was in its
infancy HTP began asking "why not an Asian Common Market?" Jean Monet,
the man credited with building a unified Europe after World War II,
remained one of his life-long heroes.
Even a fully functional
SAARC, HTP wrote, cannot be the work of governments alone. It must be a
'movement' based on the strivings of people in all the neighbouring
countries. Business, he knew, has a special role to play in this
process.
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Comments (1)
Paul Nulty12
Promoter, Coach & Web Xplorer
Interesting...