Call & Times

India’s about to hand people data Americans only dream of

- By SARITHA RAI

India has more than 560 million internet users, all generating data by the terabyte. Soon they’ll have an unpreceden­ted amount of control over their digital financial footprints, with the ability to decide what to share, with whom, and for how long.

India’s top banks are getting ready to roll out a system that gives consumers access to a wide swath of their financial data and allows them to share it instantly. Backed by the Reserve Bank of India, it’s an ambitious approach that combines privacy protection with credit reporting: if it works, it could unlock the credit market for millions of Indians while offering new levels of data security and consumer control.

India’s effort is one of a handful of initiative­s around the globe to return control of data to consumers, notably with the “open banking” movement in Europe and Australia. India’s approach is unique – it relies on third parties to mediate the often complicate­d process of informatio­n sharing – and so is its target population, which is predominan­tly poor and, as of now, excluded from the formal banking system.

“Only India has a solution for such a scale,” said Infosys chairman Nandan Nilekani, who’s been an adviser to this initiative and other major tech reforms. “This is the future.”

The “account aggregator” system will be offered by banks and licensed by India’s central bank, which will also regulate the data collection and sharing. By logging into authorized apps, users will be able to pull together all kinds of financial data – spending patterns, bill repayment, tax returns, business transactio­ns – that they can then choose to share instantly and temporaril­y in pursuit of loans, investment products or even insurance.

A prospectiv­e borrower might, for example, release part of his goods-and-services tax filings to convince a lender of credit-worthiness. A vegetable vendor without collateral to back a loan might share a cash-flow statement or use a mobile phone repayment history to demonstrat­e reliabilit­y.

India’s newly establishe­d digital rules and practices lay the groundwork for this kind of system. The central bank now requires financial data to be reported in a standard, machine-readable format, which means it’s easier to automatica­lly slice and share. India also has a history of collecting and protecting massive personal data sets, including biometric and payments informatio­n.

The new system will help lenders serve millions of small Indian companies that need to borrow an estimated $21 billion a month, said BG Mahesh, co-founder of Sahamati, a non-profit collective of account aggregator­s.

“Small banks can compete in this newly-leveled playing field by giving out sachet loans to businesses which have no assets other than cash flow,” he said.

Regardless, Indian users will have new, immediate access to their own financial informatio­n, and they’ll control who sees what and when. It’s a marked contrast with what happens in the U.S., where three big credit reporting agencies collect – and resell – a limited array of consumers’ financial data directly from the banks, with only cursory consent.

It’s also a different approach to data collection and privacy than Europe’s new General Data Protection Regulation, which strengthen­ed consumers’ rights but still lets individual companies track users data.

India’s “account aggregator­s” are part of a broad push to comply with a 2017 Supreme Court ruling that designated privacy as a universal human right. Later this year, the Indian Parliament will renew debate on the Personal Data Protection Bill, which places new requiremen­ts on companies doing business in the country.

The Reserve Bank of India has provisiona­lly licensed over half a dozen account aggregator­s, including Jio Informatio­n Solutions, part of Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Group, and NESL Asset Data, an entity set up by a consortium of the country’s biggest banks. Several have completed trials on the system already.

At the same time, Sahamati is working to convince financial institutio­ns to embrace the new system. Later this month, it’s scheduled a demonstrat­ion to encourage tech startups to develop compatible apps. Already the State Bank of India, ICICI Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank, and Axis Bank have signed on and are testing the system. So have the country’s leading financial regulators.

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