Popular Articles

Banking disrupted as employees go on strike over merger
Bank employees owing allegiance to four Left-leaning unions today went on a strike protesting the proposed merger of the State Bank of Indore with parent SBI, disrupting normal banking operations in the country, a top union official said.

payday loans online
Bharti: Looking out
India’s largest wireless service provider, Bharti Airtel is expanding its international operations by buying a majority stake in Bangladesh’s fourth largest wireless telephony service provider, Warid Telecom. This is the second major geography Bharti Airtel has ventured into after Sri Lanka where it launched its 2G and 3G service a year ago. Seychelles, Jersey and Guernsey (Channel Islands) are the other geographies where Bharti has a presence. To increase its international focus, the company recently announced that its current CEO Manoj Kohli will take charge as the head of the international business division.

News of the day

Atlas Acquisition to buy Koosharem Corp for $840 mn
Dabur"s promoter family member Gaurav Burman-led Atlas Acquisition today said it will acquire US-based staffing and employment services company Koosharem Corporation for $840 million (around Rs 3,900 crore) and merge with itself.
Home Business

Making banking mobile

Business Standard / New Delhi December 03, 2009, 1:34 IST The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has done quite a lot in recent times to extend the reach of the banking network across the country and to all sections of society. Banks have been prodded to open no-frills accounts, and to appoint “business correspondents” in areas where the size and volume of transactions are too small to justify a branch. The latest step is the notification that allows banks to appoint the local kirana/medical/fair price shop as a “business correspondent”. Potential customers can go to these neighbourhood places and operate their bank accounts, typically with a mobile phone interface that works at negligible cost. Typically, a customer would deposit money with the business correspondent who would then send a short message (SMS) to the bank; in some cases, a receipt is issued. The bank, in turn, messages the customer directly. At the other end, the person who is getting the money goes either to the bank branch or to the business correspondent closest to him/her to withdraw the money, and the SMS routine gets repeated. Oil rises on bullish US manufacturing data The question is whether more needs to be done to achieve financial inclusion. While the current system of “banking correspondents” involves a mix of mobile telephones and the banking system, should the RBI simplify matters by allowing mobile phone firms to transfer funds in much the same way as is being done in some African countries? While the current hybrid system is working well enough, the numbers being reached through the system are not large. One problem is that the commissions offered by banks are so small that customers need to transfer at least Rs 3,000-4,000 per month (fairly large sums for the sections of society this is aimed at) to make the system viable. Since there are 1.4 million outlets for mobile phone companies, as against around 85,000 bank branches, the numbers favour allowing mobile phone companies to transfer money without the need for banks acting as conduits. There are two arguments against this. One is that, given the large number of fake subscribers in the mobile banking system, the Know Your Customer (KYC) norms would be difficult to implement — though KYC implementation in kirana shops is likely to be equally problematic. Two, just as a cheque on any bank can be deposited in another bank, and money transferred from one to the other, mobile phone transfer systems need to be inter-operable across different phone firms. Ideally, a Vodafone customer in Delhi should be able to transfer funds to a Reliance Communications customer in Jhumritalaiya, without a bank as an intermediary. But inter-operability does raise tricky questions, and could, therefore, be mandated once the unique identity number system is in place. Meanwhile, a phone company could transfer funds to its own clients. For even this to be practicable, however, the mobile phone firms need to prove that they are implementing the KYC norms. And the RBI needs to stipulate prudential norms (e.g. net worth and size of transactions) to ensure that such a system of money transfers is systemically safe and not open to misuse.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):