Saturday, 24 November 2012

Finance Minister, P. Chidambaram at Bancon2012


On Day 1, the Finance Minister, P Chidambaram began his speech to BANCON 2012 delegates with an analogy: the financial system is the lifeline of any economy and banks are like the heart in a body; the heartbeat reflecting the state of health, whether or not the nation is pulsating with life.

He wanted PSUs to participate more fully and to make it happen, the next IBA Chairman should be from a PSU. He then went on to state that the world economy is still in a crisis despite efforts to stabilize it and many countries are still in depression; advanced economies in steeper decline. India has to find ways and means to use resources and funds for growth. The country’s financial growth rate cannot be less than 8%; this is not an aspiration, but an imperative. Income and job generation depend on this growth. The President of India declared 2010-2020 as as the decade for innovation.



He referred to the McKinsey report he had released: Creating a virtuous innovative cycle and mentioned what one of the essays highlighted:

1)      New customers – Farmers are good customers as they borrow and repay. Same with students and women who want to enhance their economic status through self-employment loans. But banks still need to find more such new customers. People queue up for deposits. Earlier many branches feared they would not mobilize enough savings in rural areas, but their fears were unfounded. The Hon’ble Minister gave his own example, of how he was born and raised in a small village which has mobilized 15 crore as deposits. It is the bank’s duty to seek such depositors.

2)      New offers/products – The Finance Minister mentioned the cards that have particularly helped the farmer such as the Kisan credit and the one he himself launched, minutes ago; the Ru-Pay card in association with NABARD that equipped farmers with the opportunity of financial inclusion. It has elevated mobile banking to a new realm; under its umbrella 1 lac ATMs are channelized for farmers to make cash less payments. It is also linked to AADHAR numbers and AADHAR is also another innovation.

3)      New way of doing things - Electronic banking will help reach customers as banking is a service not a product of commodity. Brick-and-mortar banks encourage “lazy banking” as it forces the customer to come to the bank, not the other way round. Every rural family should have an account. Most people want to borrow extremely small accounts like ten thousand rupees; banks should focus on such customer-centric needs.

4)      New business models – Simply put, look at things differently. Quoting Sherlock Holmes, “…if you want to hide something, place it on the table. The Finance Minister further explained that most obvious ways of doing things escape us. He continued in the same vein, “drawing on the strength of our postal system.” He is opposed to uniformity and further added that banks cannot clone each other. Goals are common but paths should be different banking systems with their own dominant regional flavor and functioning.


Among various other things the Finance Minister acknowledged that India will be the third largest economy and hence consolidation of top banks is required but local area banks (started in 1996) should not be dwarfed.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Social Sharing

Share

Widgets