HomeNewsOpinionPolicy | Banking ombudsman is a powerless third umpire

Policy | Banking ombudsman is a powerless third umpire

While the RBI has got its cricket players to present a rosy picture about dispute resolution, truth is it is in a position to influence the outcome of a dispute.

May 10, 2020 / 12:44 IST
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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has engaged members of the Indian cricket team, some of who also happen to be on its roll, for TV commercials on financial literacy. In one such advertisement, wicket-keeper batsman KL Rahul talks about the role of banking ombudsman in resolving complaints from customers and compares it to that of the “third umpire” in cricket.

Not a bad comparison on the face of it. However, the big difference is that unlike the third umpire, who has the wherewithal to go back to the event of dispute, the banking ombudsman has no means to independently verify whatever has happened. The ombudsman has to go back to the ‘umpire’ on the ground, who, in this case is the bank in question and, is inherently one of the parties to the dispute. At least in reference to the particular complaint the bank’s neutrality is open to question since it has already taken a position.

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Recently, a Bengaluru techie was shocked to hear from a member of the Standard Chartered bank’s fraud detection team that the complaint to the ombudsman ‘would anyway come’ to them and that he need not expect anything to come out of it.

In fact, this is the crux of the problem. The ombudsman merely refers the case back to the bank for its comments and in most cases the bank manages to pass the buck to somebody other than itself.