Khaleej Times

Postmen turn bankers with new initiative

- Reuters, IANS

new delhi — Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched a payments bank on Saturday to turn postmen into bankers so they can offer financial services to the poor in rural areas and boost digital transactio­ns.

Modi has since 2014 sought to end what he has called “financial untouchabi­lity” by giving millions of people access to banking services in India, which the World Bank estimates has 190 million people without a bank account, second only to China.

The India Post Payments Bank will start operations with 650 branches. Accounts will be able to hold a maximum of 100,000 rupees ($1,408) in deposits and will offer limited services.

The government said it planned to link its 155,000 post offices to the new payments bank network by December 31 to offer basic bank account services, money transfers and bill payments.

“Using this initiative, we will take the bank to villages and to the poor,” Modi said at the launch event in New Delhi, which was also attended by dozens of postal service employees who sat dressed in their khaki-coloured uniforms.

“The India Post Payments Bank will further the process of financial inclusion which started with the launch of Jan Dhan Yojana launched in 2014,” he said.

The bank would provide services such as current account, savings account, remittance­s, money transfer, direct benefit transfer, enterprise and merchant payment, Communicat­ions Minister Manoj Sinha said, adding that the services would be available through multiple channels, including counter services, micro ATM, mobile banking applicatio­ns, SMS and IVR (Interactiv­e Voice Response).

More than 300,000 postmen will use smartphone­s and other digital devices to offer doorstep banking services in remote areas of the country. While Modi addressed a gathering in Delhi, his ministers promoted the launch across the country.

The campaign to bring the masses into the financial system could help bolster economic growth and improve Modi’s popularity among the poor ahead of next year’s national election. The bank is the latest government initiative to boost digital transactio­ns and discourage cash dealings that it says enables tax evasion. Modi has promoted digital payments since his decision in November

2016 to withdraw 500 and 1,000 rupee notes from circulatio­n. Electronic transactio­ns have soared since then, although the move briefly hurt economic growth.

Indians in May clocked transactio­ns worth $52 billion using their 964 million credit and debit cards, nearly double the amount recorded in November 2016.

Monthly mobile-wallet payments have risen nearly fivefold to $2 billion during the period, data from the Reserve Bank of India showed. —

Using this initiative, (payments bank) we will take the bank to villages and to the poor Narendra Modi,

Prime Minister

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 ?? PTI ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi receives his Q card from Telecom Minister Manoj Sinha during the launch of India Post Payments Bank, in New Delhi on Saturday. —
PTI Prime Minister Narendra Modi receives his Q card from Telecom Minister Manoj Sinha during the launch of India Post Payments Bank, in New Delhi on Saturday. —

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