Business Standard

RBI, subsidiary to revamp deposit insurance scheme

SCHEME TO BE PRESENTED BY END OF YEAR TO THE CENTRAL BANK BOARD NEW CATEGORIES OF PERSONAL, INSTITUTIO­NAL DEPOSITORS ON CARDS

- RAGHU MOHAN

The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporatio­n (DICGC) — a subsidiary of the Reserve Bank of India — is to revamp the country’s 50-year-old deposit insurance scheme by the end of this year.

“The DICGC board has kickstarte­d the process and will submit its report to the finance ministry. It will be taken up at the next central bank board meeting as and when it is scheduled. Hopefully, it (the DICGC report) should be ready by then,” said a top-level source. He said the DICGC’S board is currently looking at “datasets, and has asked for more time to finalise its report”.

When specifical­ly asked if the central bank had mandated the DICGC to go ahead with the revamp, it was clarified that the “deposit insurer is well aware of what needs to be done, given the urgency in the aftermath of what has unravelled at the Punjab & Maharashtr­a Cooperativ­e Bank”.

The DICGC, said the source, will examine the feasibilit­y of a shift from the current flat-premium model of 10 paise for every ~100 of deposits held by banks to the insurer”.

Under the revised scheme — if it is accepted by the finance ministry and central bank board — there will be two categories of depositors: Personal and institutio­nal. The former will cover retail and small businesses; the latter will take care of large corporate depositors, trusts, and government agencies.

The payout in the case of liquidatio­n of the bank, which

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is now capped at ~1 lakh for every account holder, will also be increased, and be different for the two categories envisaged. Banks will also get the option to pay a higher premium to insure a larger deposit amount — in excess of ~1 lakh. “The tax exemption bracket has moved up over the years to ~5 lakh per annum. This revised upper limit should look at this and the inflation index when they arrive at the new ceiling,” said the source.

The revised framework is expected to take a cue from the Jagdish Capoor Committee on Reforms in Deposit Insurance in India (1999), the Committee on Credit Risk Model (2006) constitute­d by the DICGC which had recommende­d the introducti­on of risk-based premium for banks, and urban cooperativ­e banks. In 2015, a central bank committee under the chairmansh­ip of Jasbir Singh (Committee on Differenti­al Premium System for Banks)

also made a similar suggestion.

Deposit insurance was last revised on May 1, 1993, after the collapse of the Bank of Karad, in the wake of the securities scandal of 1992. There was little forward movement on this front as co-operative banks and regional rural banks were under ‘perpetual restructur­ing’ for a long time; and so too, the absence of a robust supervisor­y rating for all insured banks, especially cooperativ­e banks.

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