Friday, January 9, 2015
By pass RBI, create India Post Bank through law, PM's task force told govt
PRESS NEWS:
A task force set up by
Prime Minister Narendra Modi to review the operations of India’s postal
department has mooted the creation of a full-fledged Postal bank.
The panel is headed by former cabinet
secretary, TSR Subramanian and comprising of experts that includes former
Infosys board member TV Mohandas Pai,
The recommendations will be submitted to the
government soon, according to a government official in the know of the
development. In fact, the task force has recommended to launch the proposed
Post bank through an Act of the Parliament and not by approaching the Reserve
Bank of India (RBI).
“The task force has is not in favour of
permitting India Post to run a payments bank but wants the department to run a
full-fledged commercial bank, which it believe will help push the cause of
financial inclusion in the country,” the official said.
An announcement in this regard is likely to
be made as early as Thursday at Dak Bhavan, the headquarters of department
of postal services in Delhi, the official said.
The task force, set up in August, has also
made several other recommendations to leverage the vast network of India Post
and its local knowledge across regions in India, the official said.
For India Post, which has been cherishing the
dream of becoming a bank, the Subramanian panel recommendation will be a huge
boost for its demand for a full service banking permit.
The Postal department, which was among the 25
contenders for a full service banking licence last year, didn’t get into the
final list since the UPA government at the time wasn’t keen on backing the
move and refused to provide the department with the minimum capital required to
set up a commercial bank.
Last year, while issuing licenses to IDFC and
Bandhan, the RBI had observed that India Post can be given banking licence if
government, technically the promoter of the proposed Post bank, gives its nod.
India Post has argued that the department’s
entry to banking can contribute massively to the cause of financial inclusion,
or the process of spreading banking services to the unbanked population of the
country, using its vast network of 1,55,000 post offices.
Of its total network, about 1,39,040 post
offices are in rural areas. Going by a 2011 estimate of the postal department,
about 6,000 people are covered on average by post-offices in rural areas and
about 24,000 in urban areas.
Through its various saving schemes, Postal
department handles deposits to the tune of Rs 6,00,000 crore.
As Firstbiz noted earlier,
India Post’s entry into banking can be game changer in rural banking given the
massive reach of Post in the far-flung areas of the country and local knowledge.
The department has already commenced the process
of linking all its branches through technology, besides setting up ATMs
across the country.
The development has come at a time the RBI is
opening up the banking sector to differentiated banks or banks with specific
areas of focus such as payments banks and small banks. Payment banks can engage
in accepting small deposits, offer ATM/debit cards, payments and remittance
services through various channels. They can also offer financial products like
mutual fund units and insurance products.
Small finance banks, on the other hand, are
almost like full service commercial banks. However, these banks cannot engage
in large value transactions since 75 percent of their loans must be lent to the
so-called priority sector. For existing banks, this requirement is 40 percent.
Also, at least 50 percent of their loan portfolio should constitute loans and
advances of up to Rs 25 lakh.
India Post, however, is not keen to set up a
small bank or payments bank and, instead, wants a full service banking licence,
the official quoted earlier said.
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