Title: WELCOME TO PRESENTATION ON FINANCIAL INCLUSION
1WELCOME TO PRESENTATION ON FINANCIAL INCLUSION
- NABARD
- RAJASTHAN REGIONALOFFICE
- JAIPUR
2Structure of Presentation
- What is Financial Inclusion various definitions
meaning - Why Financial Inclusion National and State
scenario - How to go about it- Various options
- Support available from NABARD
- Few Initiatives taken by banks
3What is Financial Inclusion
- the process of ensuring access to financial
services and timely and adequate credit where
needed by vulnerable groups such as weaker
sections and low income groups at an affordable
cost. --- C Rangarajan
4What is Financial Inclusion
- expanding access to financial services, such as
payments services, savings products, insurance
products, and inflation-protected pensions.. - Raghuram Committee on
- Financial Sector Reforms (CFSR)
5Financial Inclusion means
- Basic no frills bank account for receiving
payments /savings / deposits - Small loan/overdraft facilities
- Money transfer facilities
- Insurance (life / non-life) services
- Financial advisory services
6What is Financial Inclusion
- While financial inclusion, in the narrow
- sense, may be achieved to some extent
- by offering any one of these financial
services, the objective of Comprehensive
Financial Inclusion would be to provide a
holistic set of financial services .
7What is Financial Inclusion few questions
- Basis - whether individual, every adult family
member/household -
- Coverage only rural or urban population is
also to be included - What about inclusion of segments like women,
minorities
8Why Financial Inclusion
- Directive Principles equal opportunities
- Inclusive growth
- Economic development
- Social development
- and
- Business opportunity
-
9Financial Inclusion Steps taken by Banking
Industry in India
- Nationalisation of Banks
- Introduction of Lead Bank Scheme
- Introduction of Priority Sector Norms
- Introduction of Service Area Concept
- Adoption of Villages by Bank Branches
- Formation of Regional Rural Banks
- Strengthening of Cooperatives
10Banking Network in India
- Rural and Semi-urban Branches
- - Commercial Banks 33,000
- - Regional Rural Banks 14,500
- - Cooperatives 106,000
- Total 153,500
- Avg. No. of villages served per branch 4
- Is the distribution equitable ? ?
- 90 villages dont have a bank branch within 5
km radius
11Extent of Financial Exclusion - India
- 51.4 of 89.3 million farmer households are
excluded from both formal/ informal sources - Only 27 of the total farmer households, access
formal sources of credit - 66 marginal farmer households excluded
- (NSSO data 59th round )
12Financial Exclusion in Rajasthan
- 47.6 of farmer households are excluded from both
formal / informal sources - Outreach of formal financial institutions is
around 35 households - SHG / MFI outreach to about 25 families in
rural areas but cater to only limited financial
needs
13Gradation of Financial Exclusion
- Core Exclusion Who operate their financial
affairs outside the regulated financial system - Limited Access May have a basic bank account
but poor financial habits and little advice - Though Included but using inappropriate products
14Reasons for Financial Exclusion
- Physical distance
- Mutual disbelief poor are not bankable, on
other side banks and other FIs are not for us - Lack of appropriate products/services
- Lack of awareness, financial illiteracy
- Processes too tedious and complicated
- and
- AAJ TIME NAHI HAI/STAFF CHHUTTI PAR HAI/
CLOSING HAI, KAL AANA -.
15National Rural Financial Inclusion Plan (NRFIP)
- Provide comprehensive financial services to
atleast 50 (55.77 million) of the excluded rural
cultivator and non-cultivator households across
different states by 2012 through rural /
semi-urban branches of CBs RRBs - remaining
households by 2015 - Semi-urban / rural branches of CBs / RRBs to
cover 250 new cultivator and non-cultivator per
branch per annum
16State Rural Financial Inclusion Plan (SRFIP)
- DLCCs at district level to draw block /
village-wise maps of rural households not having
access to formal credit sources - Thereafter, a State Level Financial Inclusion
Plan to be prepared jointly by NABARD and SLBC to
cover minimum 50 currently excluded households
by 2012 - The Plan to be allocated institution-wise among
CBs RRBs. Cooperative Banks, NBFCs, MFIs to
take on the self set targets of financial
inclusion
17Financial Inclusion how to go about it
- Traditional approach
- Improvement in existing system reintroduce
Service area approach to bring in accountability
- Extending network - using existing extension
setups like Farmers clubs, KVKs - Evolving new models of effective
outreachBusiness Facilitators / Business
Correspondents
18Financial Inclusion how to go about it
- Traditional approach
- Community based approach like SHGs, JLGs
Improving credit literacy through camps - Introduce Only Field Work Days (OFDs) in
rural/semi urban branches - Target approach as per NRFIP
19Financial Inclusion how to go about it
- New approach
- Leveraging on technology based solutions
- Public Private Partnership mode take new
players on board
20Efforts initiated for FI in Rajasthan
- Adoption of 6 pilot districts for 100 financial
inclusion - Implementation of Bhamashah Yojna by GOR
- SHG- Bank Linkage programme
- Supported MFIs to help them reach out to poor
- Mobile phone based banking
21Financial Inclusion Efforts of NABARD
- Two funds namely Financial Inclusion Promotion
Fund (FIF) and Financial Inclusion Technology
Fund (FITF), each having initial corpus of Rs.
500 crore have been constituted by the GOI and
placed with NABARD - Each fund is to be equally contributed by GOI,
RBI and NABARD with annual accretions - Eligible organisations to avail the funds for
greater financial inclusion
22Financial Inclusion Fund (FIF)
- Eligible Purposes
- Funding support for capacity building inputs to
BCs / BFs - Providing promotional support to institutions
such as Resource Centres, Farmers Service
Centres, RUDSETIs to enable them to provide
improved technical and financial services
(including counseling)
23Financial Inclusion Promotion Technology Fund
(FITF)
- Encouraging user friendly technology solutions
- Providing financial support to technological
solutions aimed at providing affordable financial
services to the disadvantaged sections of the
society - Creating a common technology infrastructure with
comprehensive credit information - Funding support to technologies facilitating the
documentation for processing of loans - Providing viability gap / pilot project funding
for unproven but potential technological
interventions
24Eligible Institutions FIF FITF
- CBs, RRBs and Cooperative Banks
- NGOs, MFIs, SHGs, Farmers Clubs, Local Level
Associations, etc. - Training and Research Organisations, Academic
Institutions, Universities, etc. - Service providers like Insurance Companies (micro
insurance), Post Offices, Railways, etc. - Any other organisation whose objectives are in
conformity with the overall objectives of FIF
25Financial Inclusion Initiatives by Banks
- Set up 100 centres in agri-lending branches for
agriculture counseling SBI - Use of handheld devices and bio-metric cards in
a village of Tamilnadu IOB, UBI - Introduce 198 Village Knowledge Centre for
imparting knowledge to the farmers UBI, Dena
Bank - Introduced Union Mitr Scheme (90) for
providing financial education and debt counseling
services to rural population, free of cost UBI - Introduced Dena Bhoomiheen Kisan Credit Card
Scheme(Rs.25,000) for Tenant farmers, oral
lessees, share croppers and landless labourers
Dena Bank
26FINANCIAL INCLUSION
- TOGETHER WE CAN
- AND
- WE WILL - - -!