"I
don't want to speak specifically about India Post (which has applied for a
commercial banking licence) itself. What I am saying is that worldwide, they
(postal banks) have been very effective as payment banks," said Mor, who
recently submitted a report on financial inclusion to the RBI.
Source: www.financialexpress.com
Mor,
a former executive director of ICICI Bank, is also a member of an external
panel that is scrutinising the 25 banking aspirant applications.
The
panel headed by former RBI governor Bimal Jalan will meet again on February 10.
The committee had a mandate to submit its report before January end, by when
Governor Raghuram Rajan had expected to issue some new bank licences.
Mor
was answering a question from the media on whether he supports the application
of India Post for a commercial banking licence. He spoke on the sidelines of a
banking inclusion summit organised by a business daily.
Stating
that financial inclusion is needed because the country has a small banking
system, he said deepening financial inclusion requires either new banks, which
is long, steady and slow process, or expanding the reach of existing banks. One
way to do this is to empower non-banking lenders, who have an important role to
play in inclusion, he said.
The
Finance Ministry is not very keen on letting India Post convert itself into a
bank, citing practical difficulties, even though more than 90 per cent of its
1.55 lakh post offices are located in villages.
Postal
savings as of last March stood at Rs 6.05 trillion, which is half the total
deposits of the nation's largest bank, State Bank of India.
Last
week, Minister for Communications & Information Technology Kapil Sibal said
his ministry would ensure that India Post gets a banking licence.
"Banks
can learn a lot from NBFCs, which have a better hold over asset quality and
costs. There is a need for banks to collaborate more for financial inclusion --
they should not frown at the idea of working together," Mor said.
Admitting
that it is very expensive for a large bank to originate credit in its own
branches, he said studies say the cost of credit for a Rs 1 lakh loan is Rs
23,000. Regional banks have an edge in this sense.
Mor,
who called for 10 types of banks, including pure-play payment banks in his
report, also said the regulators should play the role of referee and not
captain, and leave issues such as pricing for the market to decide.
The
report of the Committee on Comprehensive Financial Services for Small
Businesses and Low-Income Households, submitted on January 7, envisaged a bank
account for every adult citizen in two years.
"By
January 1, 2016 each resident, above the age of 18, would have an individual,
full-service, safe and secure electronic bank account," the report said.
The
Mor panel was announced by Raghuram Rajan when he took over as RBI Governor on
September 4.
Mor
was a classmate of Rajan at the Indian Institute of Management in Ahmedabad and
quit ICICI Bank to join the non-profit sector.
The
other members of the Mor panel included former Citigroup CEO Vikram Pandit,
Axis Bank chief Shikha Sharma, Crisil chief Roopa Kuduva and corporate lawyer
Zia Modi.
Source: www.financialexpress.com
0 comments:
Post a Comment