HomeNewsBusinessIndia finance minister proposes relaxing local data storage rules for payment firms: Report

India finance minister proposes relaxing local data storage rules for payment firms: Report

India’s finance ministry, in a meeting held in June, said that a possible solution could be that companies store a copy of the data in India as well as storing it elsewhere.

July 11, 2018 / 21:02 IST
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India’s finance ministry has proposed relaxing a directive from the country’s central bank to compel global payment firms to store customer data locally, a document seen by Reuters shows, following weeks of intense lobbying by US companies and trade bodies.

The proposal comes as a relief for companies including MasterCard, Visa and American Express that fear India’s data onshoring move could cost them millions of dollars and set a precedent for other major governments to implement similar rules at a time when there is heightened scrutiny on how companies globally handle their customers’ data.

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Foreign payment companies were caught off guard in April by the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) one-page directive that said all payments data should within six months be stored only in the country for “unfettered supervisory access”.

India’s finance ministry, in a meeting held in June with RBI officials and executives from payment companies, said that a possible solution could be that companies store a copy of the data in India as well as storing it elsewhere.