Millennium Post

RBI sticks to Oct 15 deadline for data localisati­on Bank credit rises by 12.51%, deposits by 8.07%

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NEW DELHI: The RBI will not relax the October 15 deadline for global financial technology (fintech) companies to comply with its data localisati­on norms in the public interest, according to sources.

The central bank in April gave six months time to global payment companies to store transactio­n data of Indian customers within India. The RBI’S data localisati­on norms will kick in from Monday.

However, the US wants to prohibit data localisati­on to ensure free flow of informatio­n across borders.

“We want to have prohibitio­ns on data localisati­on to ensure free flow of informatio­n, free flow of data across borders, discipline­s around countries requiring companies to give up their source code, permanent ban on taxation or duties on digital transmissi­ons, Dennis Shea, Deputy US Trade Representa­tive and US Ambassador to the WTO, told a Washington audience on Friday.

According to the sources, global fintech companies reportedly sought an extension of the October 15 dead

line but it seems that the RBI is not inclined to relax the norms.

Data localisati­on requires data about residents be collected, processed, and stored inside the country, often before being transferre­d internatio­nally, and usually transferre­d only after meeting local privacy or data protection laws.

Although domestic companies have welcomed the guide

lines, global companies fear increase in their expenses for creation of local servers.

To avoid this rise in cost, global companies in recent meeting with the RBI proposed to provide mirror data instead of original data to which the central bank did not agree, the sources said.

Last week, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley met RBI Deputy Governor B P Kanungo to discuss RBI’S data localisati­on norms. The meeting was also attended by Economic Affairs Secretary Subhash Chandra Garg, Financial Services Secretary Rajiv Kumar and IT Secretary Ajay Prakash Sawhney.

The RBI in April said in order to ensure better monitoring of payment service operators it is important to have unfettered supervisor­y access to data stored with these sys-

Although domestic companies have welcomed the guidelines, global companies fear increase in their expenses for creation of local servers

tem providers as also with their service providers/ intermedia­ries/third party vendors and other entities in the payment ecosystem .

All system providers shall ensure that the entire data relating to payment systems operated by them are stored in a system only in India, it had said. The RBI further said data should include the full end-toend transactio­n details, informatio­n collected/carried/ processed as part of the message/payment instructio­n. MUMBAI: Bank credit rose by 12.51 per cent to Rs 89.82 lakh crore in the fortnight ended September 28, while the deposits grew by 8.07 per cent to Rs 117.99 lakh crore, according the RBI data. In the yearago fortnight, advances stood at Rs 79.83 lakh crore, while the deposits at Rs 109.17 lakh crore. In the fortnight ended September 14, bank credit had risenby 13.46 per cent to Rs 87.98 lakh crore, while the deposits grew by 8.58 per cent to Rs 115.70 lakh crore.

In August this year, nonfood credit rose by 12.4 per cent, as against an increase of 5.5 per cent in the year-ago month, the RBI data showed. Advances to industry rose by 1.9 per cent in August, against a contractio­n of 0.3 per cent in August 2017. Credit to the services sector grew by 26.7 per cent, against 5 per cent last year.

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