India
Post, the world's largest mail delivery network, is carving out a separate
vertical to manage banking services, a move that will help it win RBI nod for
interoperability of its ATMs with those of PSU banks.
India
Posts, which had last year won a licence to operate a payment bank, has not
been able to move much on starting operations.
"We
wanted interoperability of the ATMs of Post Offices with other banks. RBI said
we can allow it only if Post offices create a separate bank vertical because
RBI has jurisdiction over only banks. The Postal department has taken a
positive approach and created a separate vertical," a finance ministry
official said.
The
vertical will be based out of Bengaluru.
Interoperability
will allow individuals to transfer money from their Post Office account to
their accounts in any bank. Besides, the Post Office ATMs can be used for
withdrawal of money from the bank accounts.
The
official, further, said the vertical will be created to operationalise the Post
Bank licence and ultimately it would get merged suitably with the Post
Bank.
DoP
has 28,000 departmental post offices and 1.50 lakh rural post offices across
the country.
The
Postal Department is proactively setting up ATMs and micro ATMs in its rural
post offices so as to tap its wide network for financial inclusion.
"RBI
said this separate vertical of the Postal department is open for banking
regulation. The RBI is favourably considering the option to provide
interoperability," the official said.
"This
will help in moving towards a less cash economy. Post Office has its branches
even in the remotest areas where banking mitras or business correspondents
cannot reach. Interoperability will allow leveraging the reach of Postal
department," the official added.
With
the formal structure of Post Bank likely to take around a year and half, the
government wants to kick start its operations in parts by first putting into
use the ATMs of Post Offices.
India
Post plans to roll out 10,000 ATMs and 20,000 micro ATMs across the country by
the end of this year.
India
Post payments bank will primarily target unbanked and under-banked customers in
rural, semi-rural and remote areas, with a focus on providing simple deposit
products and money remittance services.
The
Union Cabinet last month cleared a proposal to set up India Post payments bank
with a corpus of Rs 800 crore.
Payments
banks can accept deposits (initially up to Rs 1 lakh per individual), offer
Internet banking, facilitate money transfers and sell insurance and mutual
funds by piggy-backing on existing retail or other networks. Besides, they can
issue ATM/debit cards, but not credit cards.
The
Postal payments bank, which will be run by Chief Executive Officer, will be
professionally managed and there will be a officials from Department of Posts,
Department of Expenditure and Department of Economic Services etc on its board.
Source
: The Economic Times
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