India Post Bank is likely to tap World War-era tech to garner business
It is back to basics for India Post Payments Bank (IPPB). It is tapping into World War-era phone-based technology and its vast network of postman to target a customer base of around 850 million, which either have no access to telephony or still depend on feature phones.
“Banks and payments banks are two different things.Over 90% households
have access to bank accounts. So, we are targeting remittances and bill
payments,“ said an officer at the bank, which launched operations a
month ago, offering 5.5% interest on deposits.
Unlike full-fledged banks, payments banks can accept deposits up to Rs
1lakh and have to mandatorily park 75% of funds in government bonds.They
are not allowed to offer loans either.
With its network of over 1.5 post offices, IPPB is seen to be a major
competitor for banks, especially in rural areas and small towns. The
bank, floated by India Post, is running behind schedule as it is yet to
tie up with a technology vendor for its banking services. But it is
still targeting 2 crore customers in the first year with business of
around Rs 450 crore.By the fifth year, the bank hopes to have eight
crore customers with a business of Rs 2,500 crore.
A key focus area for IPPB is one billion bills that are paid every
month, with the average ticket size being Rs 300. This is where Giro -an
electronic fund transfer tool used in Europe and Japan -will come in
handy . Apart from helping customers settle bills, a worker in a city
can add his wife or mother as a beneficiary and transfer funds into
their accounts by issuing instructions to a call centre. The wife or the
mother will then use Aadhaar based authentication to withdraw funds
either at a post office or ask a postman to deliver cash at home, for
which a small fee may be levied.
IPPB is also in talks with the rural development ministry for accessing
details of NREGA beneficiaries and pensioners getting funds under the
National Social Assistance Programme.Again, idea is to make the payments
Aadhaar-based to minimise leakages.
Source:-The Economic Times
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