The
government on Wednesday cleared proposal to set up India Post payments bank
with a corpus of Rs 800 crore and has plans to have 650 branches operational by
September 2017, Telecom Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said.
"The
Cabinet has cleared proposal of postal payments bank. We have 1.54 lakh post
offices of which 1.39 lakh are rural post offices. 650 branches of postal
payments bank will be established in the country which will be linked to rural
post offices," Prasad said.
Here is how
the postal department is preparing to take on the behemoths:
1) India Post
Payments Bank (IPPB) will start operations in March 2017 in about 50
districts and cover the entire country by the end of financial year 2018-19,
Prasad said. It will offer basic banking, payments of DBT benefits, utility
bills, collection of taxes/fees, remittances etc.
2) The bank
will be run by Chief Executive Officer, and will be professionally managed
with a representation from various other government departments
including the Department of Posts, Department of Expenditure, Department
of Economic Services etc.
3) Of the Rs
800 crore, Rs 400 crore will be equity and the balance grant.
4) Prasad
said that all 'grameen dak sevaks' in rural post offices will be given handheld
devices by March 2017. "We are reinforcing it further. I have had
discussion with my officers to give iPad and smartphones to postmen
in urban post offices," Prasad said.
6) At
present, core banking network of post offices is more than that of State Bank
of India. SBI has 1,666 core banking branches while 22,137 post offices now
have core banking facility.
7) More than
50 national and international banks, insurance companies, money transfer
organisations are keen to tie up with IPPB, he said.
8) About 5000
ATMs will be set up for IPPB initially. It will have a focus on rural,
semi-urban and offer mobile banking platforms, digital wallets, use emerging
technologies such as Unified Payments Interface (UPI), e KYC, AEPS and catalyse
the shift from a cash dominant to a less cash economy.
With PTI
inputs
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