HomeNewsOpinionG20 Summit: Five charts that show how India got half a billion people into the banking system

G20 Summit: Five charts that show how India got half a billion people into the banking system

In eight years, India opened over 462 million new bank accounts for the poor. That’s more than the entire population of the United States, France and UK put together. By any yardstick, this is an astonishing number for anyone interested in global financial inclusion

April 15, 2024 / 14:24 IST
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In his maiden Independence Day speech as Prime Minister on August 15, 2014, Narendra Modi broke convention by speaking extempore for 65 minutes. Sporting a polka-dotted Gujarati red-and-green turban, Modi played the outsider card, explaining to a national audience how Delhi’s elites looked upon him as an “untouchable” and how he found not one united government but many, with government departments often fighting with each other rather than working as one.

All the usual touchpoints of the Modi model that were soon to become signature programmes of his government – “Digital India”, mobiles, Swachh Bharat and toilets – first featured in this inaugural Red Fort speech.

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Social Welfare Through Financial Inclusion

It was also the first time Modi spoke about the idea of the Pradhan Mantri Jan-Dhan Yojana. In a country where a majority of the citizens had never had a bank account, the scheme’s ambition was sky high. It promised a zero-balance bank account, a debit card and an insurance safety net of Rs 100,000 to every poor Indian.