Business Standard

Chit funds move up the value chain

But the shift to digital modes has also raised the level of scrutiny and taxation

- SHINE JACOB Chennai, 9 December

Chit fund, an industry that is said to be at least 1,000 years old, is facing testing times like never before. One of the earliest forms of pooled resource financing or peer-to-peer lending based on a high degree of community trust, the business has rapidly kept up with the times by going digital. But the launch of online collection process, mobile applicatio­ns and e-auctions has brought with this hitherto under-regulated industry greater government­al scrutiny, taxation and regulation that now threatens its growth.

States such as Telangana (through T-chits) are in the process of solving the complex issue of regulating and monitoring chit funds even as existing largest players like Balussery, Shriram Chits and Gokulam are taking digital initiative­s for the comfort of clients and employees. “Earlier, everything used to be manual. Now, through E-KYCS and an app people can get into the website and, with just two to three clicks, gain admission into the particular chit. We are trying to provide the auction procedure also online,” said KRC Sekhar, managing director, Shriram Chits.

On the other hand, start-ups such as Noida-based Money Club (founded by IIT Kharagpur alumni Manuraj Jain and Surajit Ray) are trying to take it to the next level by going completely online. Acting as an artificial­ly intelligen­t chit fund cashier in the form of an Android applicatio­n, the start-up delivers a higher value propositio­n to savers, investors as well as borrowers. Despite this, the government machinery is extending scant support for the fintech companies to enter the chit fund domain.

Part of this reluctance may be on account of the fact that the chit fund industry has been notoriousl­y difficult to regulate

and it is so informal in nature that data is hard to come by. Based on data available with the All India Associatio­n for Chit Funds, the size of the chit fund industry in India is over ~75,000 crore with around 50,000 registered chit funds working in the country. Interestin­gly, the size of the un-registered segment is expected to be at least 50 times larger than the regulated component. The majority of these funds are based in Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala and Delhi. The primary challenge that the industry is facing is that there is no centralise­d data on the number of chits in the country. Also, other

than Telangana, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka, there is less digital data available with the government nationally.

“Our competitio­n is with an unregister­ed segment on how to bring them to the mainline. What the government has to do is that the registrati­on has to be user-friendly,” said T S Sivaramakr­ishnan, advisor, All India Associatio­n for Chit Funds, and director of Balussery Benefit Chit Fund. Sivaramakr­ishnan indicated that the major challenge that the industry is facing is a perception battle with “Ponzi schemes and multi-level marketing schemes like Saradha in West Bengal” being described as chit funds.

In June this year, the government had increased the goods and services tax (GST) on chit fund services from 12 to 18 per cent. This came at a time when the industry was demanding tax reliefs. “There is a rise in demand for high-denominati­on chit funds. The unique selling point for the chit fund is that the savers are getting better returns and borrowers affordable costs. Now, what is happening is borrowers are benefittin­g and for savers there is a difference of almost about 2-2.5 per cent due to this GST,” said Sekhar. Shriram’s chit fund business has disbursed almost ~30,000 crore and has posted an annual turnover of ~4,500 crore in 2021-22, up by ~400 crore (from around ~4,100 crore a year ago). It is aiming at 25 per cent growth from this year onwards to touch around ~10,000 crore by 2025-26.

Sivaramakr­ishnan added that when interest rates go up, for a borrower chit funds are a safer option, so demand rises. “Demand has increased by 1015 per cent in terms of turnover compared to last year. We are confident that whatever business we lost in two-and-a-half years due to Covid will be recovered in six to seven months.”

As part of its transition phase, the industry is trying to push for a credit rating process and there is already a start-up in place for this called Credright, which provides credit check services and arranges loans for chit fund subscriber­s. Another startup, which experts say, is changing the traditiona­l sector is Chitmonks, a platform that uses blockchain technology to ease flow of informatio­n from chit fund companies to regulators.

Of course, the perception problems remain, despite the digital push. To battle this, the industry is also coming up with a campaign similar to the mutual fund industry’s “Mutual funds sahi hai”. “We are more than sahi hai,” one of the sources said on a lighter note.

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