HomeNewsBusinessCompaniesWhy payments, small banks will revolutionise banking system

Why payments, small banks will revolutionise banking system

While payment banks, driven by mobile connections and technology, will extend the liabilities side of the business by making banking accessible to everyone, small finance banks will enable more focused lending to small businesses and borrowers, thus extending the assets base of the banking system.

September 19, 2015 / 13:20 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

R JagannathanFirstpost.com

With the announcement of the grant of "in-principle" approvals to 10 "small finance banks" on 16 September, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has kicked off its second leg of transformative changes in the banking system. The first leg consisted of the approvals given to 11 "payments banks", banks which will focus on raising deposits and invest only in government paper.

Story continues below Advertisement

Nothing will be the same anymore: the old oligopoly of the big banks will be under threat from the new challengers; banking services will become accessible to nearly all potential customers, rich or poor; costs for customers will come down, and service quality should improve with time as the competitive landscape changes dramatically with the entry of scores of differentiated banks.

Between them, payment and small finance banks will launch a pincer attack on the cosy, oligopolistic banking system. While payment banks, driven by mobile connections and technology, will extend the liabilities side of the business by making banking accessible to everyone, small finance banks will enable more focused lending to small businesses and borrowers, thus extending the assets base of the banking system. Small depositors and borrowers are currently poorly served by the banking system, and they are also charged much higher interest rates. Put another way, payments banks will try to wean away the cheapest deposits of banks, while small banks will target the highest interest-paying borrowers when they expand across the country.To be sure, there has been some carping about how the initial lot of payment and small bank licensees have been chosen by the Reserve Bank (as this article argues), but the larger picture is that this may not matter. For the central banks’ intention is to make payment and small finance bank licences available on tap to anyone who is eligible after assessing how the initial set of licensees perform. Cautious as always, the RBI is probably doing the right thing by hastening slowly.Of the two sets of new, differentiated banks, payment banks are probably going to do more in the initial stages (read why here), since they can dramatically increase the reach of banking by using mobile-based technology. And the biggest players in this game are all well-funded and credible. Among the initial licensees are the Aditya Birla Group, Airtel, Vodafone, Reliance (owner of Network18, which publishes Firstpost), India Post (the country’s postal service), billionaire Dilip Shangvi (owner of Sun Pharma, India’s largest pharma company) and PayTM, the e-wallet company.Consider the numbers: Airtel has 230 million customers, Vodafone 185 million and Idea 162 million. That’s over 577 million potential payment bank customers between just three future payment banks. India Post, with over 1.5 lakh post offices, many in semi-urban and rural areas, can serve several hundred million customers from its branches. PayTM already has 25 million e-wallet customers, who are all potential targets for its payment bank.