Policy Brief July 2016
DIGITAL FINANCIAL INCLUSION: AGENDA FOR
INDIA
Summary
India
has made tremendous progress towards universal financial inclusion in 2015
and the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana(PMJDY) has been central to the leap
ahead. The target of 100% household coverage in bank accounts enabled with
bundled benefits of debit card, overdraft and insurance cover has been the
big game changer in the landscape. MicroSave’s assessment of the PMJDY mission with regard
to the agent network and customer awareness has revealed good results from
the ground. Clearly the PMJDY mission is achieving its objective of providing
access to basic financial services to all households in India. Going ahead,
the focus must remain on strengthening the agent network. Here the Reserve
Bank of India has moved towards setting up an agent database as well as
ensuring standardized certification and training. The challenges of low
commissions, delays in payment of commissions and inadequate support that are
straining the chain for inclusion at the last mile need to be addressed.
Digital retail transactions picked up steam in 2015, and the latest game
changer in payments comes from the Unified Payment Interface being launched
by the NPCI, that will enable seamless and easy payments between bank
accounts. Further, in June 2016, the Insurance Regulatory and Development
Authority of India (IRDAI) drafted the Insurance E-commerce Regulations
laying out guidelines for a self-network platform to sell and service
policies online.
The first payments bank to get its license was Bharti Airtel in April 2016.
In partnership with Kotak Mahindra Bank, it is slated to begin operations
this year. Capital Small Finance Bank Limited became India's 1st Small
Finance Bank, starting operations on April 24, 2016. In May three potential
payments banks surrendered their in-principle approvals. On August 1, the
Reserve Bank of India released guidelines for on-tap licensing of universal banks that
will increase competition in the banking sector.
The JAM Trinity (Jan Dhan Yojana account + Aadhaar number + Mobile number)
has heralded a new focus for financial inclusion and less-cash economy. The
Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and
Services) Bill, 2016 was passed as a money bill in March 2016, opening up the
use of Aadhaar for government payments and benefits. The Direct Benefits
Transfer programme has been extended to more schemes, with pilots on to test
models for food, fertiliser and kerosene subsidies.
This note takes stock and updates the Indicus policy brief of December 2015,
where the remaining policy and regulatory barriers to digital financial
inclusion in India were set out, assessed against three key objectives:
- Maximize
the impact of PMJDY by addressing the last mile challenges in the agent
network
- Create
an interoperable, ubiquitous retail acceptance infrastructure
- Cultivate
an enabling environment for enhanced digital savings, credit, and
insurance services.
Top Priorities:
- The core issue of viability of Business Correspondent
Agents (BCAs) for delivering benefits at the last mile remains. The
inadequacy of the 1% commission notified by the Finance Ministry in Jan
2015, and its uncertain disbursement and distribution among banks and
BCs are reportedly making this a key cause of the high churn of BCAs.
This needs to be resolved equitably.
- The business of Payments Banks to be operational by
2017 will be influenced significantly by their eligibility to process
Direct Benefits Transfers on a competitive basis and at par with
incumbent players. This requires clarification in operational aspects.
- With the Aadhaar Bill now in place, it is necessary
to clarify its use for expenditures not borne out of the Consolidated
Fund of India.
----------------------------------------------------------------
The Priorities
A : Maximize the
impact of PMJDY by addressing the last mile challenges in the agent network
- Establish
a viable DBT commission system, including a multi-tier structure
commensurate with delivery costs to ensure viability of agents at the
last mile of service delivery. Issue guidelines on commission
disbursement time limits and sharing of DBT charges among banks and
agents
- Clarify
legal and enabling provisions for use of Aadhaar for government
disbursements not borne from Consolidated Fund of India
- Map
telecom connectivity coverage density (voice, 2G, 3G, 4G) at SSA and
tower level, and monitor/ report data quality metrics at granular (tower
or SSA level)
- Clarify
the eligibility of Payment Banks in processing DBT transfers at par with
Scheduled Commercial Banks
B : Create a
ubiquitous, interoperable retail acceptance infrastructure
- Build
in cost efficiency and improved security of KYC through a singular
KYC/e-KYC regime with centralised common pool repository with
appropriate data security and control
- Issue
guidelines on interchange transaction fees for white label BCs to
provide person to person transactions using IMPS and other traceable
transaction platforms
- Evolve
accreditation of BCs and BCAs for various financial products and
services, to enhance the financial viability of the retail network for
financial service transactions
C : Cultivate an
enabling environment for enhanced digital savings, credit, and insurance
services
- Create
appropriate regulatory framework for cross-sector partnerships: banks,
insurance, telcos to offer bundled mutual products, and back end data
analytics
- Work
towards building customer consent architecture, including enacting
appropriate legislation that defines the scope of sensitive personal
information and governs its use based on principles of prior informed
consent and affixing liabilities
A .
Maximize the impact of PMJDY
|
Potential Barrier
|
Asks
|
Main Responsibility
|
|
Banks and BCs find the DBT
service charges (1%) non-remunerative and inadequate to cover the costs
incurred on the field. This has been a critical constraint in creating an
effective and sustainable delivery chain in the last mile.
The sharing of remuneration between banks and BCs is not transparent or
proportionate to costs incurred by each.
Banks and BCs are uncertain about the schedule of reimbursement for DBT
commissions.
|
Establish a viable DBT
commission system, commensurate with delivery costs, whereby commission
rates are higher in particularly hard-to-reach geographies
Consider large financial payments architecture as a public good; have a
time bound rationalization of DBT service charges to enable investment
recovery, and then migrate to competitive pricing models
Issue guidelines on commission disbursement time limits and sharing of DBT
charges among banks and agents
|
Ministry
of Finance
|
|
The success of the digital
financial system depends on DBT flows attaining necessary scale and
economic viability. The active participation of line ministries
administering various schemes is essential. The coverage of DBT has been
expanded in 2016. The Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other
Subsidies, Benefits and Services) Bill, 2016 has been passed and applies to
all expenditures paid out of the Consolidated Fund of India.
|
Clarify legal and enabling
provisions for use of Aadhaar for government disbursements not borne from
Consolidated Fund of India
|
Ministry
of Finance Relevant line ministries
Ministry of Law and Justice, Parliament.
State Governments
|
|
Weak telecom connectivity and
bandwidth hinders e-KYC and biometric / PIN authentication and limits
digital transactions in remote areas. Telecom coverage is reported at the
state or circle level and does not provide visibility into coverage at
village or SSA level.
|
Map telecom connectivity
coverage density (voice, 2G, 3G, 4G) at SSA and tower level, and monitor/
report data quality metrics at granular (tower or SSA level)
|
PMJDY
Mission Directorate
Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI)
|
|
Lack of clarity on whether
Payments Banks will be allowed to process DBT payments directly, which are
now allocated only to Scheduled Commercial Banks. In some schemes like
MGNREGA, the state needs to identify and nominate the banks for processing
payments.
|
Clarify the eligibility and
guidelines for Payment Banks to be designated for processing DBT transfers/credits
into Aadhaar seeded beneficiary accounts
|
Reserve
Bank of India(RBI)/ Ministry of Finance, Line Ministries
|
B .
Create a ubiquitous, interoperable retail acceptance infrastructure
|
Potential Barrier
|
Asks
|
Main Responsibility
|
|
Multiple KYC requirements of
banks, telcos and other service providers add to costs and potential for
errors. A common KYC system for banks and telcos will ensure a seamless
identification of customers across services at lowest costs.
|
Build in cost efficiency and
improved security through a singular KYC/e-KYC regime with centralised
common pool repository with appropriate data security and control
|
RBI
Indian Banks’ Association (IBA), TRAI
|
|
Nesting BCs as captive
extensions of individual banks restricts the potential of the retail
footprint for financial transactions.
There is no policy framework for establishing interoperability among BC
agents of different banks to provide services not directly linked to cash
withdrawals and deposits into bank accounts.
|
Issue guidelines on
interchange transaction fees for white label BCs to offer person-to
person-transactions using IMPS and other traceable transaction platforms
Issue guidelines for accreditation of BCs for various financial products
and services, to enhance financial viability of retail network for payment
and financial service transactions
|
Ministry
of Finance RBI
|
C .
Cultivate an enabling environment for digital savings, credit, and insurance
services
|
Potential Barrier
|
Asks
|
Main Responsibility
|
|
Banks,
payment service providers, insurance/pension providers and telcos are
unable to exploit synergies in serving same customers due to multiple
domain regulators and restrictions on sharing of customer data.
Financial service providers lack credible data to establish credit scores
of the poor.
Sharing of customer data and financial transaction trends can aidcustomer
profiling and risk management.
|
Create appropriate regulatory
framework for cross-sector partnerships– banks, insurance, telcos – to
offer bundled mutual products, and share transaction analytics with due
security safeguards and with informed prior consent of customers
Work towards building customer consent architecture, including enacting
appropriate legislation that defines the scope of sensitive personal
information and governs its use based on principles of prior informed
consent and clear liabilities
|
RBI,
Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), Insurance Regulatory and
Development Authority of India (IRDA)
Ministry of Home Affairs
Ministry of Law and Justice
Ministry of Corporate Affairs
|
Table
1 Progress of Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (All figures in crores, as on
03.08.2016)
|
Bank
|
RURAL
|
URBAN
|
TOTAL
|
NO OF RUPAY CARDS
|
AADHAAR SEEDED
|
BALANCE IN ACCOUNTS (Rs.)
|
PERCENTAGE OF ZERO-BALANCE-ACCOUNTS
|
|
Public Sector
|
10.02
|
7.87
|
17.89
|
14.80
|
9.19
|
32184.75
|
24.5%
|
|
Regional Rural
|
3.50
|
0.57
|
4.07
|
2.83
|
1.57
|
7083.57
|
21.2%
|
|
Private
|
0.52
|
0.32
|
0.84
|
0.78
|
0.35
|
1526.51
|
36.8%
|
|
Total
|
14.04
|
8.77
|
22.81
|
18.41
|
11.11
|
40794.85
|
24.3%
|
Source : http://pmjdy.gov.in/account
Table
2 Position of Bank Mitra Infrastructure Report as on 05.08.2016
|
Banks
|
Number of Sub Service Areas (SSA) allotted Rural
|
Total Number of Bank Mitra Required
|
SSA covered through fixed location Bank Mitra
|
SSA covered through Branches
|
Number of locations uncovered due to connectivity
|
Number of Active Bank Mitra doing Transactions
|
Number of Device Capable under EKYC Transaction
|
Number of Device Capable under RuPay Card Based
Transaction
|
Number of Devices Capable under AEPS Transaction
|
|
GRAND TOTAL
|
159860
|
126688
|
125938
|
33172
|
750
|
113608
|
106153
|
83423
|
116203
|
Source : http://pmjdy.gov.in/infrastructure
|
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