Wednesday, August 20, 2014

winds of change?

the winds of change,
inverts the image
of the strands of age,
in  the gilded cage..

police states
traps and baits,
fate awaits
at the pearly gates..

recurrent throb
of the agitated mob
that does the job
of a nuclear bomb

good times
for rhymes
load, shoot
and then aim...




Thursday, August 14, 2014

A short cut to financial inclusion



A short cut to financial inclusion:

The Central Governments ambitious plan for financial inclusion under the Sampooorn Vittiya Samaveshan (SVS) targets the inclusion of 100 million unbanked households. Is this achievable with the present banking network and mindset? Or is there a short cut?

Consider this. In the 67 years of independence despite the best efforts of the Reserve Bank through regulation, persuasion and coercion, banks have managed to penetrate barely 40% of all households. Even where they have supposedly opened bank accounts a very significant number of the so called “no frills accounts”, have remained dormant, with customers finding no sense in operating these accounts due to lack of access, benefits and products.  It is time to realize and accept that banks have neither the will nor the ability or indeed the technology to achieve the financial inclusion mission. Policy makers need to understand and acknowledge that the current banking infrastructure may not be the most optimum way to reach the unbanked. The brick and mortar model that banks employ is slow and expensive.

Cell phone companies have managed to accomplish a 60% penetration of the total population in one third the time that the banks took, through a mindset that values customers, technology that is cheap to deploy and a product that customers want. It is important to note here that the documentation that is required to get a cell phone account is not a lot different from the set that is prescribed by the RBI for the opening of no frills accounts. They already have developed capacity to handle micro payments, money transfers, and have the data to create sensible credit products that can be delivered cheaply. Most importantly, customers are very used to going to the nearest recharge outlet to load up their phones with airtime.

The communication architecture, the network and technology that these companies have put in place can easily be adapted to achieve the Governments financial inclusion targets. What it only requires is a change in the mindset of policy makers that banks are not the exclusive or effective option for delivery of financial products. Why not consider using the more efficient and effective infrastructure that is already in place.
In practical terms many prepaid customers already consider their airtime as storage of value. A few more sophisticated customers already use it as a payment mechanism. The track records of cell phone usage and bill payment cycles can form an excellent proxy for structuring credit products. Banks starting afresh with new customers will legitimately have concerns about extending credit to newly acquire customers.
Policy makers should seriously consider allowing cell phone companies to either act as full fledged banks. in the alternative allow them to operate as front end with customers ,with banks providing the back end processing and balance sheet support.


The Government and the RBI may have the greatest opportunity here to accomplish a policy goal by simply marrying the credit, capital and balance sheet strengths’ of banks with the marketing, distribution and technology capabilities of cell phone companies.