Business Standard

RESERVE BANK STAYS FIRM ON MDR REVISION

- ADVAIT RAO PALEPU

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) made it clear on Wednesday that it would stay firm on recent revisions to the merchant discount rate (MDR).

Retailers across the country are protesting against the RBI’s move to “rationalis­e” the MDR based on the turnover of the merchant establishm­ent. The MDR is the rate charged to a merchant by a bank for providing debit and credit card services. Under the revised rule, merchants with a turnover of more than ~20 lakh would have to pay a maximum MDR of 0.9 per cent of the transactio­n value to banks. But for smaller establishm­ents, the MDR would be 0.4 per cent of the transactio­n value. The Retailers Associatio­n of India (RAI) has been vocal about the changes, but RBI Deputy Governor B P Kanungo said in a select press interactio­n that the associatio­n did not provide feedback to the draft guidelines on charges when it was put out.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) made it clear on Wednesday that it would stay firm on recent revisions to the merchant discount rate (MDR).

Retailers across the country are protesting against the RBI’s move to “rationalis­e” the MDR based on the turnover of the merchant establishm­ent.

The MDR is the rate charged to a merchant by a bank for providing debit and credit card services. Under the revised rule, merchants with a turnover of more than ~20 lakh would have to pay a maximum MDR of 0.9 per cent of the transactio­n value to banks. But for smaller establishm­ents, the MDR would be 0.4 per cent of the transactio­n value.

The Retailers Associatio­n of India (RAI) has been vocal about the changes, but RBI Deputy Governor B P Kanungo said in a select press interactio­n that the associatio­n did not provide feedback to the draft guidelines on charges when it was put out.

“I have received a request for a meeting from the Retailers Associatio­n. I have not met them; I am going to meet them. They want to articulate the issues that they have,” Kanungo said.

“After elaborate consultati­ons, MDR charges have been fixed to achieve the twin objectives of giving a further fillip to debit transactio­ns, especially at smaller merchant establishm­ents, while making it worthwhile for banks to recover part of their cost so as to invest in technology, fraud prevention and security of the transactio­ns,” he added.

He said while the MDR was not to be borne by the customer, it was the maximum rate and retailers often got discounts from their banks on the rates.

Kanungo said banks also needed to be adequately compensate­d for the infrastruc­ture that they put out. The present set of charges would help ease those cost pressures and encourage the banks to build up further infrastruc­ture.

While there were many possible options for the central bank to adopt to minimise losses for the banks, none of them was under active considerat­ion as of now, the deputy governor said.

“So far in our regime we have been controllin­g the MDR. Depending on our experience at some stage if we find that something is a better option, we can certainly consider that,” Kanungo said, adding the interchang­e charges varied from bank to bank, depending on the card network used.

 ??  ?? Retailers across the country are protesting against the RBI’s move to “rationalis­e” the MDR based on the turnover of the merchant establishm­ent
Retailers across the country are protesting against the RBI’s move to “rationalis­e” the MDR based on the turnover of the merchant establishm­ent

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