ndia
Post as a Bank is most suited for Financial Inclusion in rural areas:
ASSOCHAM - See more at:
http://www.orissadiary.com/ShowBussinessNews.asp?id=45091#sthash.wNPxgtGg.dpuf
India
Post as a Bank is most suited for Financial Inclusion in rural areas: ASSOCHAM
ndia
Post as a Bank is most suited for Financial Inclusion in rural areas:
ASSOCHAM - See more at:
http://www.orissadiary.com/ShowBussinessNews.asp?id=45091#sthash.wNPxgtGg.dpuf
New Delhi: Apex industry body ASSOCHAM has come out in support of the
proposed setting up of India Post as a rural banking structure to push
financial inclusion in the country’s hinterland, claiming several benefits to
the economy in this move, including raising domestic savings and investment
levels.
Terming this bank proposal as a
potential “game changer as a conduit not only for financial inclusion but to
induce socio-economic change”, The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry
of India (ASSOCHAM) listed several benefits like low cost of operation and “as
one great opportunity to achieve higher growth rates of household and domestic
savings and investment.”
ASSOCHAM has submitted a detailed
study on the proposed India Post Bank making several suggestions for its
effective functioning in a shift to core banking operations from merely
handling savings accounts. It underlined India Post’s claim that its savings
schemes already handling over Rs 6,05,697 crores annually with over 28 crore
accounts in its various savings schemes.
Among the suggestions of ASSOCHAM
was linking of MGNREG and other government payments in rural areas through this
India Post Bank, handling the five million SHG units, linkages with the
proposed Women’s Bank with at least one woman employee in each post office bank
branch, use of PSU banks’ training facilities and bringing India Post bank
under one or the other PSU bank for operational oversight in each zone.
Pointing out that rapid urbanization
and internal migrations have raised annual remittances from urban to rural
areas to a record Rs 70,000 crores and the rural jobs scheme MGNREG is pushing
Rs 40,000 crores into villages every year, ASSOCHAM said the India Post with
its 1,39,086 rural post offices , one for every cluster of five villages, and
2,63,467 Gramin Dak Sevaks is best suited to tap into this flow and raise
domestic savings. “This is a huge resource at hand and touches almost
every part of the country’s interior” the chamber said.
It also noted other areas of rapid
rise in rural incomes like higher minimum support prices for various
commodities both food grains and commercial crops and National Livelihood
Mission in rural areas. Business and industry were now focusing on the emerging
rural market as a new opportunity, the chamber said quoting its own previous
studies on rural markets and other recent studies. Some five million new
general stores have come up employing over 8 million people in rural areas in
the last five years according to its study.
“Even just Rs 100 per household
saved every month could bring over Rs 12,000 crores from the 45 per cent of
unbanked households in rural areas” ASSOCHAM asserted listing what the postal structure
could achieve if properly utilized.
India Post was already handling a
number of financial schemes in villages like National Small Savings, Recurring
Deposits, Public Provident Fund, Postal Insurance, etc. In recent years
as many as 4 crores of MGNREG accounts were also handled through post offices
for payment of wages, forming over 40 per cent of the MGNREG funds for job
entitlement scheme. The chamber underlined the fact that in the financial
aspect of India Post it was handling a currently outstanding balance of Rs 6
trillion (lakh crores), an enormous potential for savings and investment at the
grass root level.
ASSOCHAM study also noted the
changes occurring in India Post with rapid adoption of information technology,
commercial operations in acting as sales agent for many items making it already
“technology enabled, self-reliant market leader” through its IT project 2012.
The chamber said this change has enabled it to venture into rural banking
beyond merely acting as a conduit for remittances from urban to rural areas
(and also vice versa) and running savings accounts.
The proposed India Post Bank should
enter into core banking operations. ASSOCHAM suggested the new structure for it
be linked to a public sector bank for a limited period to gain training and
oversight on core banking operations through the existing and additional
employees. ASSOCHAM suggested linkage with the proposed Women’s Bank with rural
postal bank offices employing at least one woman in each post office bank
branch. The chamber also said that low cost of operations that held the key to
success in handling rural banking especially among the bottom of the pyramid
people was a major advantage for the India Post in its new avtar as a bank.
ASSOCHAM has also suggested linking
the Self-Help Groups also to the proposed India Post Bank for disbursal of
loans to promote small and micro businesses.
The Central Government at present
had to provide budgetary support of Rs 6,000 crores annually to India Post to
support its operations. The chamber was hopeful that with the proposed
extension into rural banking operations, India Post would no longer require
such support and Government could save this annual outgo besides creating an
infrastructure to draw domestic savings from the rural areas where a major
transformation was already underway.
ASSOCHAM also released a companion
study on “Rural Employment” that revealed a significant shift in employment in
villages away from agriculture into new jobs especially in construction sector,
growth of several thousand “census towns” that provide new focus for industrial
and business activities serving and drawing from villages around and relentless
rise in rural wages especially backed by MGNREG jobs scheme and investments in
roads, houses and healthcare under the Bharat Nirman programme.
SOURCE :http://www.orissadiary.com/ShowBussinessNews.asp?id=45091
New Delhi: Apex
industry body ASSOCHAM has come out in support of the proposed setting
up of India Post as a rural banking structure to push financial
inclusion in the country’s hinterland, claiming several benefits to the
economy in this move, including raising domestic savings and investment
levels.
Terming this bank proposal as a potential “game changer as a
conduit not only for financial inclusion but to induce socio-economic
change”, The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India
(ASSOCHAM) listed several benefits like low cost of operation and “as
one great opportunity to achieve higher growth rates of household and
domestic savings and investment.”
ASSOCHAM has submitted a detailed study on the proposed India Post
Bank making several suggestions for its effective functioning in a shift
to core banking operations from merely handling savings accounts. It
underlined India Post’s claim that its savings schemes already handling
over Rs 6,05,697 crores annually with over 28 crore accounts in its
various savings schemes.
Among the suggestions of ASSOCHAM was linking of MGNREG and other
government payments in rural areas through this India Post Bank,
handling the five million SHG units, linkages with the proposed Women’s
Bank with at least one woman employee in each post office bank branch,
use of PSU banks’ training facilities and bringing India Post bank under
one or the other PSU bank for operational oversight in each zone.
Pointing out that rapid urbanization and internal migrations have
raised annual remittances from urban to rural areas to a record Rs
70,000 crores and the rural jobs scheme MGNREG is pushing Rs 40,000
crores into villages every year, ASSOCHAM said the India Post with its
1,39,086 rural post offices , one for every cluster of five villages,
and 2,63,467 Gramin Dak Sevaks is best suited to tap into this flow and
raise domestic savings. “This is a huge resource at hand and touches
almost every part of the country’s interior” the chamber said.
It also noted other areas of rapid rise in rural incomes like
higher minimum support prices for various commodities both food grains
and commercial crops and National Livelihood Mission in rural areas.
Business and industry were now focusing on the emerging rural market as a
new opportunity, the chamber said quoting its own previous studies on
rural markets and other recent studies. Some five million new general
stores have come up employing over 8 million people in rural areas in
the last five years according to its study.
“Even just Rs 100 per household saved every month could bring over
Rs 12,000 crores from the 45 per cent of unbanked households in rural
areas” ASSOCHAM asserted listing what the postal structure could achieve
if properly utilized.
India Post was already handling a number of financial schemes in
villages like National Small Savings, Recurring Deposits, Public
Provident Fund, Postal Insurance, etc. In recent years as many as 4
crores of MGNREG accounts were also handled through post offices for
payment of wages, forming over 40 per cent of the MGNREG funds for job
entitlement scheme. The chamber underlined the fact that in the
financial aspect of India Post it was handling a currently outstanding
balance of Rs 6 trillion (lakh crores), an enormous potential for
savings and investment at the grass root level.
ASSOCHAM study also noted the changes occurring in India Post with
rapid adoption of information technology, commercial operations in
acting as sales agent for many items making it already “technology
enabled, self-reliant market leader” through its IT project 2012. The
chamber said this change has enabled it to venture into rural banking
beyond merely acting as a conduit for remittances from urban to rural
areas (and also vice versa) and running savings accounts.
The proposed India Post Bank should enter into core banking
operations. ASSOCHAM suggested the new structure for it be linked to a
public sector bank for a limited period to gain training and oversight
on core banking operations through the existing and additional
employees. ASSOCHAM suggested linkage with the proposed Women’s Bank
with rural postal bank offices employing at least one woman in each post
office bank branch. The chamber also said that low cost of operations
that held the key to success in handling rural banking especially among
the bottom of the pyramid people was a major advantage for the India
Post in its new avtar as a bank.
ASSOCHAM has also suggested linking the Self-Help Groups also to
the proposed India Post Bank for disbursal of loans to promote small and
micro businesses.
The Central Government at present had to provide budgetary support
of Rs 6,000 crores annually to India Post to support its operations.
The chamber was hopeful that with the proposed extension into rural
banking operations, India Post would no longer require such support and
Government could save this annual outgo besides creating an
infrastructure to draw domestic savings from the rural areas where a
major transformation was already underway.
ASSOCHAM also released a companion study on “Rural Employment” that
revealed a significant shift in employment in villages away from
agriculture into new jobs especially in construction sector, growth of
several thousand “census towns” that provide new focus for industrial
and business activities serving and drawing from villages around and
relentless rise in rural wages especially backed by MGNREG jobs scheme
and investments in roads, houses and healthcare under the Bharat Nirman
programme.
- See more at: http://www.orissadiary.com/ShowBussinessNews.asp?id=45091#sthash.wNPxgtGg.dpuf
New Delhi: Apex
industry body ASSOCHAM has come out in support of the proposed setting
up of India Post as a rural banking structure to push financial
inclusion in the country’s hinterland, claiming several benefits to the
economy in this move, including raising domestic savings and investment
levels.
Terming this bank proposal as a potential “game changer as a
conduit not only for financial inclusion but to induce socio-economic
change”, The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India
(ASSOCHAM) listed several benefits like low cost of operation and “as
one great opportunity to achieve higher growth rates of household and
domestic savings and investment.”
ASSOCHAM has submitted a detailed study on the proposed India Post
Bank making several suggestions for its effective functioning in a shift
to core banking operations from merely handling savings accounts. It
underlined India Post’s claim that its savings schemes already handling
over Rs 6,05,697 crores annually with over 28 crore accounts in its
various savings schemes.
Among the suggestions of ASSOCHAM was linking of MGNREG and other
government payments in rural areas through this India Post Bank,
handling the five million SHG units, linkages with the proposed Women’s
Bank with at least one woman employee in each post office bank branch,
use of PSU banks’ training facilities and bringing India Post bank under
one or the other PSU bank for operational oversight in each zone.
Pointing out that rapid urbanization and internal migrations have
raised annual remittances from urban to rural areas to a record Rs
70,000 crores and the rural jobs scheme MGNREG is pushing Rs 40,000
crores into villages every year, ASSOCHAM said the India Post with its
1,39,086 rural post offices , one for every cluster of five villages,
and 2,63,467 Gramin Dak Sevaks is best suited to tap into this flow and
raise domestic savings. “This is a huge resource at hand and touches
almost every part of the country’s interior” the chamber said.
It also noted other areas of rapid rise in rural incomes like
higher minimum support prices for various commodities both food grains
and commercial crops and National Livelihood Mission in rural areas.
Business and industry were now focusing on the emerging rural market as a
new opportunity, the chamber said quoting its own previous studies on
rural markets and other recent studies. Some five million new general
stores have come up employing over 8 million people in rural areas in
the last five years according to its study.
“Even just Rs 100 per household saved every month could bring over
Rs 12,000 crores from the 45 per cent of unbanked households in rural
areas” ASSOCHAM asserted listing what the postal structure could achieve
if properly utilized.
India Post was already handling a number of financial schemes in
villages like National Small Savings, Recurring Deposits, Public
Provident Fund, Postal Insurance, etc. In recent years as many as 4
crores of MGNREG accounts were also handled through post offices for
payment of wages, forming over 40 per cent of the MGNREG funds for job
entitlement scheme. The chamber underlined the fact that in the
financial aspect of India Post it was handling a currently outstanding
balance of Rs 6 trillion (lakh crores), an enormous potential for
savings and investment at the grass root level.
ASSOCHAM study also noted the changes occurring in India Post with
rapid adoption of information technology, commercial operations in
acting as sales agent for many items making it already “technology
enabled, self-reliant market leader” through its IT project 2012. The
chamber said this change has enabled it to venture into rural banking
beyond merely acting as a conduit for remittances from urban to rural
areas (and also vice versa) and running savings accounts.
The proposed India Post Bank should enter into core banking
operations. ASSOCHAM suggested the new structure for it be linked to a
public sector bank for a limited period to gain training and oversight
on core banking operations through the existing and additional
employees. ASSOCHAM suggested linkage with the proposed Women’s Bank
with rural postal bank offices employing at least one woman in each post
office bank branch. The chamber also said that low cost of operations
that held the key to success in handling rural banking especially among
the bottom of the pyramid people was a major advantage for the India
Post in its new avtar as a bank.
ASSOCHAM has also suggested linking the Self-Help Groups also to
the proposed India Post Bank for disbursal of loans to promote small and
micro businesses.
The Central Government at present had to provide budgetary support
of Rs 6,000 crores annually to India Post to support its operations.
The chamber was hopeful that with the proposed extension into rural
banking operations, India Post would no longer require such support and
Government could save this annual outgo besides creating an
infrastructure to draw domestic savings from the rural areas where a
major transformation was already underway.
ASSOCHAM also released a companion study on “Rural Employment” that
revealed a significant shift in employment in villages away from
agriculture into new jobs especially in construction sector, growth of
several thousand “census towns” that provide new focus for industrial
and business activities serving and drawing from villages around and
relentless rise in rural wages especially backed by MGNREG jobs scheme
and investments in roads, houses and healthcare under the Bharat Nirman
programme.
- See more at: http://www.orissadiary.com/ShowBussinessNews.asp?id=45091#sthash.wNPxgtGg.dpuf
New Delhi: Apex
industry body ASSOCHAM has come out in support of the proposed setting
up of India Post as a rural banking structure to push financial
inclusion in the country’s hinterland, claiming several benefits to the
economy in this move, including raising domestic savings and investment
levels.
Terming this bank proposal as a potential “game changer as a
conduit not only for financial inclusion but to induce socio-economic
change”, The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India
(ASSOCHAM) listed several benefits like low cost of operation and “as
one great opportunity to achieve higher growth rates of household and
domestic savings and investment.”
ASSOCHAM has submitted a detailed study on the proposed India Post
Bank making several suggestions for its effective functioning in a shift
to core banking operations from merely handling savings accounts. It
underlined India Post’s claim that its savings schemes already handling
over Rs 6,05,697 crores annually with over 28 crore accounts in its
various savings schemes.
Among the suggestions of ASSOCHAM was linking of MGNREG and other
government payments in rural areas through this India Post Bank,
handling the five million SHG units, linkages with the proposed Women’s
Bank with at least one woman employee in each post office bank branch,
use of PSU banks’ training facilities and bringing India Post bank under
one or the other PSU bank for operational oversight in each zone.
Pointing out that rapid urbanization and internal migrations have
raised annual remittances from urban to rural areas to a record Rs
70,000 crores and the rural jobs scheme MGNREG is pushing Rs 40,000
crores into villages every year, ASSOCHAM said the India Post with its
1,39,086 rural post offices , one for every cluster of five villages,
and 2,63,467 Gramin Dak Sevaks is best suited to tap into this flow and
raise domestic savings. “This is a huge resource at hand and touches
almost every part of the country’s interior” the chamber said.
It also noted other areas of rapid rise in rural incomes like
higher minimum support prices for various commodities both food grains
and commercial crops and National Livelihood Mission in rural areas.
Business and industry were now focusing on the emerging rural market as a
new opportunity, the chamber said quoting its own previous studies on
rural markets and other recent studies. Some five million new general
stores have come up employing over 8 million people in rural areas in
the last five years according to its study.
“Even just Rs 100 per household saved every month could bring over
Rs 12,000 crores from the 45 per cent of unbanked households in rural
areas” ASSOCHAM asserted listing what the postal structure could achieve
if properly utilized.
India Post was already handling a number of financial schemes in
villages like National Small Savings, Recurring Deposits, Public
Provident Fund, Postal Insurance, etc. In recent years as many as 4
crores of MGNREG accounts were also handled through post offices for
payment of wages, forming over 40 per cent of the MGNREG funds for job
entitlement scheme. The chamber underlined the fact that in the
financial aspect of India Post it was handling a currently outstanding
balance of Rs 6 trillion (lakh crores), an enormous potential for
savings and investment at the grass root level.
ASSOCHAM study also noted the changes occurring in India Post with
rapid adoption of information technology, commercial operations in
acting as sales agent for many items making it already “technology
enabled, self-reliant market leader” through its IT project 2012. The
chamber said this change has enabled it to venture into rural banking
beyond merely acting as a conduit for remittances from urban to rural
areas (and also vice versa) and running savings accounts.
The proposed India Post Bank should enter into core banking
operations. ASSOCHAM suggested the new structure for it be linked to a
public sector bank for a limited period to gain training and oversight
on core banking operations through the existing and additional
employees. ASSOCHAM suggested linkage with the proposed Women’s Bank
with rural postal bank offices employing at least one woman in each post
office bank branch. The chamber also said that low cost of operations
that held the key to success in handling rural banking especially among
the bottom of the pyramid people was a major advantage for the India
Post in its new avtar as a bank.
ASSOCHAM has also suggested linking the Self-Help Groups also to
the proposed India Post Bank for disbursal of loans to promote small and
micro businesses.
The Central Government at present had to provide budgetary support
of Rs 6,000 crores annually to India Post to support its operations.
The chamber was hopeful that with the proposed extension into rural
banking operations, India Post would no longer require such support and
Government could save this annual outgo besides creating an
infrastructure to draw domestic savings from the rural areas where a
major transformation was already underway.
ASSOCHAM also released a companion study on “Rural Employment” that
revealed a significant shift in employment in villages away from
agriculture into new jobs especially in construction sector, growth of
several thousand “census towns” that provide new focus for industrial
and business activities serving and drawing from villages around and
relentless rise in rural wages especially backed by MGNREG jobs scheme
and investments in roads, houses and healthcare under the Bharat Nirman
programme.
- See more at: http://www.orissadiary.com/ShowBussinessNews.asp?id=45091#sthash.wNPxgtGg.dpuf
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.