What Wikipedia Says About India Post Payment Bank or IPPB
The India Post Payments
Bank (IPPB) is a proposed state-owned commercial bank in India. The bank would
use the existing network of the public-sector postal service, India Post.
History
In 2006, it was announced
that India Post would open a bank to erase its ₹1,000 crore deficit during the
11th Five Year Plan, emulating Poste italiane. In February 2013, it was
announced that India Post had hired Ernst and Young to prepare a report on the
proposed bank. Some officials of the Ministry of Finance had opposed the plan
saying that India Post did not have the expertise to provide banking services
such as handling credit.
In August 2013, the
Planning Commission of India said that even though it supported the plan, it
was not feasible owing to financial difficulties at the moment. It also felt
that converting post offices into bank branches may hamper their original
function. In October 2013, the Cabinet of India rejected the proposal on the
grounds that India Post did not have sufficient expertise in running a bank. In
December 2013, India Post announced that it would install ATMs in 1000 of its
office across India in the first half of 2014.
On 27 February 2014, India
Post opened its first ATM in Chennai. In April 2014, the Reserve Bank of India
(RBI) gave in-principle banking licences to IDFC and Bandhan Financial Services
out of 26 applicants, but India Post was not considered for a licence because
it had not received the mandatory clearance from the government. However, the
RBI said that it would examine the proposal separately in consultation with the
government.
In September 2014, a task
force was formed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi which aimed to study ways in
which the existing postal network could be leveraged. The task force was headed
by T. S. R. Subramanian. On 4 December 2014, the task force submitted its
report to Minister for Communications and Information Technology Ravi Shankar
Prasad. The report said that more services should be provided in the field of
banking, insurance and e-commerce.
In late December 2014, it
was announced that India Post would issue ATM-cum-debit cards to its Post
Office Savings Bank (POSB) account holders. In January 2015, it was announced
that the Indian government was considering a legislature, to finalise the
setting up of the bank, following which a banking license would be applied for
at the Reserve Bank of India. On 28 February 2015, during the presentation of
the Budget it was announced that India Post will use its large network to run a
payments bank.
Role
in financial inclusion
India Post has about
1,54,000 post offices, of them 90% are in rural areas. There is one post office
for every 7176 people in India. India Post also has 2,96,000 agents in the
rural area. About 2.2 crore people, already receive their National Rural Employment
Guarantee Act (NREGA) payments by post offices. After State Bank of India,
India Post has the largest deposits valued at ₹6 lakh crore.
T. S. R. Subramanian has
said that it could aid in the ongoing Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana financial
inclusion plan.
Structure
and funding
The Payments Bank will be
set up on a lean operating model. It will focus on financial inclusion by
harnessing low-cost technology based solutions to extend access to formal
banking especially in rural areas and among unbanked and under banked segments
of the society. It has proposed by the task force that the existing Post Office
Savings Bank (POSB) should be continued to run parallel to the new bank
initially. Later, it should be merged with the bank. The existing post offices shall
provide banking services to customer, whereas the bank branches shall handle
back-office work, like processing loan applications, assessing credit
worthiness and risk assessment, investment operations etc.
The Post Bank shall also
provide institutional accounts to panchayats and micro-credit agencies.
Initially, the bank will operate separately from the postal business, with a
branch in every district for the first three years. The bank will require an
initial funding of ₹500 crore from the government.
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