INDIAN POSTAL BANKING HAS LOTS OF SCOPE DUE TO
CONNECTIVITY, SAYS COMMUNICATIONS MINISTER.
Even with
widespread retail banking in place, India’s postal banking service has a large
scope due to its connectivity, stressed Communications and IT Minister, Ravi
Shankar Prasad on Wednesday (October 29).
Prasad was
inaugurating the Postal Savings Banks Forum in New Delhi, which was organised
by World Savings and Retail Banking Institute (WSBI) jointly with the National
Savings Organisation (Ministry of Finance) and the Department of Posts.
The theme
of the forum was “The Rising Force of Postal Banking in the Retail Banking
Market”.
According
to a statement by the Press Information Bureau of India, post offices hold 1.6
billion savings and deposit accounts globally, which is second to commercial
banks that hold about 2.5 billion accounts.
Prasad
said that postal banking transcended the rich and poor barrier, the biggest
asset being the network of post offices throughout the country.
“The
asset, ladies and gentlemen, to my understanding is connectivity. In India, as
the Secretary Posts rightly pointed out, we have huge institutions spread all
across different parts of India,” he said.
India has
more than 150, 000 post offices, more than the 100,000 commercial banks, the
statement read. Savings accounts in post offices in the country numbered to 310
million more than that of any commercial bank.
Prasad
stressed on postal financial inclusion, saying that government services like
India Post had not only given employment to many Indians but were giving
impetus to e-commerce which was further giving employment and financial
inclusion to the poor. Big e-commerce giants like Amazon employ India Post to deliver
their goods to various parts of the country.
With a
population exceeding 1.1 billion, a burgeoning middle class and better Internet
access, India’s e-commerce potential is huge. Online retail sales are expected
to surge to $76 billion by 2021, according to consultants Forrester, and the
segment is growing at a much slower pace than other emerging markets, including
China.
Prasad
further said that the Indian Prime Minister had constituted a task force to
deliberate on ideas and innovations for the Indian Postal Services.
“Yes,
postal banking is a very exciting idea. I have always been supportive of it.
Therefore, the Prime Minister himself has started a big task force headed by
eminent officers in which Secretary Posts is also there, to come up with a very
structured report outlining the new challenges, the new opportunities and the
new way ahead for the Postal Services in India,”said Prasad.
Earlier
this year, Modi promised to end “financial untouchability” with the Jan Dhan
Yojana or Scheme for the People’s Wealth. The scheme would ensure the majority
of households in India, of nearly 1.3 billion people, have a bank account
within months.
The
government said nearly 15 million people opened accounts at centres around the
country on the first day of the programme.
The goal is to open 75 million accounts by January next year.
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