Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

RBI’s Mundra bats for bank account number portabilit­y

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Some banks are using charges on maintainin­g minimum average balance in accounts and offering other facilities as an excuse to deny or deter a few customers from availing some of their services, RBI deputy governor S S Mundra said on Tuesday.

Mundra also batted for introducti­on of bank account number portabilit­y using Aadhaar and various platforms of NPCI (National Payments Corporatio­n of India).

“While banks have been granted autonomy in fixing minimum average balance or charging for premier services, it should not be used as an excuse to deny or drive away services to the common man. This is what we tend to observe in some of the institutio­ns...it is moving in that direction,” Mundra said.

Most of the banks have introduced charges on non-maintenanc­e of minimum balance in accounts and for using bankingrel­ated facilities.

He said there is no harm in banks charging customers to offer select services but norms should not be designed to keep some customers away.

Mundra was speaking at an event organised by the Banking Codes and Standards Board of India (BCSBI) here. “If a bank is offering premier services, I don’t see anything wrong for them to charge for that but it should be reasonable and not usurious, and it should not be designed to keep some customers away,” Mundra said.

The deputy governor said the RBI’s concern is limited to ensuring availabili­ty of banking services to all customers and it is not looking into the amount banks are levying on customers to offer these facilities.

“In the last two years, Aadhaar enrolment has happened, platforms have been created by NPCI, many apps to do banking transactio­n like IMPS have been introduced. With all these, account number portabilit­y is a very much in the realm of possibilit­y,” Mundra said.

He said once account number portabilit­y becomes a reality, banks will see the ‘silent customer’ moving away from them without even talking to them.

The deputy governor said the RBI is soon going to prescribe the minimum narration for bank statement or pass book that would be easier for customers to understand. Mundra said many banks are not adhering to the code of conduct designed by BCSBI. The BCSBI is an independen­t body set up by the RBI, Indian Banks Associatio­n and scheduled commercial banks, with the objective of ensuring customers get fair treatment.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? RBI deputy governor S S Mundra
MINT/FILE RBI deputy governor S S Mundra

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