HomeNewsOpinionA Kafkaesque tale of Indian consumer banking

A Kafkaesque tale of Indian consumer banking

After discovering a shocking drop in his credit score, the author faces a frustrating battle against a mysterious fraudulent account. Despite efforts to rectify the situation, he finds himself trapped in an unresponsive system, highlighting the challenges many consumers face in India

November 04, 2024 / 13:49 IST
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consumer banking
Bureaus and banks wield unchecked power, their customers at their mercy.

It all began innocently enough. I was weighing the prospect of joining a company’s board and figured I’d check my credit score, a routine step in vetting new directors these days. I opened my banking app, expecting to see my usual high score. But what I saw nearly stopped my heart: 665. A full 130 points lower than it had always been, an impossible drop. Bewildered and deeply unsettled, I stared at that number. I’d taken out only one loan in my life—a home loan, twenty years ago, with every payment on time since. No other loans, no missed bills. Something was terribly, inexplicably wrong. A seasoned banker friend urged me to file a formal complaint with the credit bureau. That’s when things took a darker turn.

A Frightening Discovery

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I logged onto the bureau’s website and keyed in my details, only to be met with a strange message: there was already a login and password associated with my information. This made no sense. I had never directly contacted the bureau before, let alone set up an account. A chill ran down my spine. Was someone out there using my credentials? My credit score had plummeted, and now I was locked out from even lodging a complaint.

As I checked my spam folder, something even more sinister surfaced—a credit card bill for Rs 435 on an account I hadn’t used in thirteen years. Furious, I contacted the bank’s card department head, demanding an explanation. He confirmed that the claim was baseless, assured me the account was inactive, and promised to clear the record. But a week later, the call center phoned, insisting I “settle” the phony debt. Furious, I escalated the matter, copying the bank’s MD and CEO. An automated response blandly assured me my issue was “under investigation.”