Written By Admin on 19 June 2013 | Wednesday, June 19, 2013
The
Department of Financial Services (DFS) has opposed the proposal of the
Department of Posts (DoP) to apply for a banking licence. According to
the DFS, though the network of post offices is large with 1.55 lakh
offices across the country, they neither have an interconnected system
in place to give people access to their money anywhere and at anytime
like the banks, nor experience in lending.
“A Cabinet note is being
circulated by the DoP for them to apply for a banking licence. But we
are against the move,” a senior DFS official told FE.
The DoP wants to start a bank
initially with at least 40-50 branches – with one or two in each state –
with a focus on lending to small and medium enterprises and gradually
over a period of ten years increase the branch network to around 800 by
going into rural areas. According to the RBI guidelines, the initial
minimum paid-up voting equity capital for a bank should be Rs 500 crore,
while the DoP has sought a capital of Rs1,900 crore for its banking
venture, sources said.
The DFS official, however, said
the DoP's plan seems “half-baked” as it was “not clear on how they will
evolve a system like the banks have to help their depositors access
money easily anywhere at anytime.”
“Banking is a different ball game
altogether. It will require a lot of training for the post office staff
to learn the rules. It will not be easy for DoP to run a full-fledged
bank,” the official said, adding that a lack of experience in lending is
also a drawback for the DoP.
The DoP, however, is keen to
submit its application to the RBI before the July 1 deadline and the
bank will be set up a through a wholly-owned Non-Operative Financial
Holding Company (NOFHC). The DoP had taken the help of consultancy firm
Ernst & Young in preparing its strategy. “The main benefit (in
giving a bank licence to DoP) is that it will help boost the financial
inclusion plan,” said Ashvin Parekh, national leader (global financial
services), Ernst & Young. The Cabinet note was prepared on the basis
of the Ernst & Young report.
The DoP intention is not to
convert all its post offices into banks, but wants a separate banking
entity for which it has decided to hire a separate team of
professionals, sources said. It has already spent around R200 crore in
the last four years to put up a core banking solutions-like system in
place, they added.
Incidentally, the government had
started a R4909 crore-worth information technology-driven project to
modernise the postal network. The government had allocated R532 crore in
2013-14 to make post offices a part of the core banking solution and
help it offer real time banking services.
The DoP also pointed out that the
post offices reach even the remote corners of the country as the
network includes 1.4 lakh post offices in rural areas, 15,000 in urban
areas and another 30,000 points of presence. Post offices already offer
many financial services for urban and rural people including savings
accounts, recurring deposit accounts, monthly income schemes, public
provident fund, time deposits, senior citizens savings scheme, national
savings certificates and postal life insurance. Besides, post offices
also offer money remittance services, distribution of mutual funds and
securities and are also provide electronic international money order
service and forex services.
The
DoP also provides services on the new pension scheme and retail
services such as sale of forms and bill collection. The DoP is also a
government agent for providing services on Mahatma Gandhi National Rural
Employment Guarantee Scheme wage disbursement and old age pension
payments.
Source : www.financialexpress.com
[http://www.financialexpress.com/news/india-post-s-bank-plans-meet-hurdle/1130814]
Source : www.financialexpress.com
[http://www.financialexpress.com/news/india-post-s-bank-plans-meet-hurdle/1130814]
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