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Financial Inclusion in India: Need & Challenges

  • Over five decades after bank nationalisation aimed to democratise credit access, recent hikes in minimum balance requirements, such as ICICI Bank raising the urban limit to ₹50,000, risk deepening financial exclusion. Such policies disproportionately affect low-income customers, reviving concerns over elitism in banking.

Financial Inclusion in India: Statistics

  • Account–Usage Gap: 78% of Indians have bank accounts, but only 35% use them actively for savings or transactions.
  • Branch Density Divide: Urban areas have 3.4 bank branches per 100,000 people, while rural areas have only 1.2.
  • Credit Inequality: Just 8% of rural households access formal credit, compared to 27% in urban areas.
  • Minimum Balance Exclusion: ICICI Bank’s ₹50,000 (urban) and ₹25,000 (semi-urban) minimum balances risk excluding low-income earners.
  • Digital Banking Gap: UPI transactions surged 54% in 2024, but rural uptake lags due to poor connectivity and low digital literacy.

Financial Inclusion in India

Reason for Banking Inequality in India

  • Income Bias: HNIs get faster loans and better rates, while 70% of small borrowers face delays (RBI).
  • Balance Burden: Non-maintenance penalties make 23% of low-income accounts dormant (Findex).
  • Digital Gap: Rural digital banking use is 37% vs 68% in urban areas (IAMAI).
  • Credit Lockout: Only 8% of rural households and 27% of MSMEs access formal credit (NABARD).
  • Service Lag: Rural branches have 40% fewer staff and 50% slower processing (RBI).

Barriers to Fair Finance

  • Economic Exclusion: 38% of low-income adults rely on informal lenders, paying interest rates up to 36%.
  • Wealth Concentration: Top 10% hold 77% of total wealth, aided by preferential credit access (Oxfam).
  • Trust Deficit: 41% of rural account holders cite perceived bias as a reason for avoiding banks (RBI).
  • Gender Gap: Only 27% of women have formal borrowing access. E.g., rural women’s credit uptake is just 14% (NFHS-5).
  • Poverty Persistence: Financial exclusion slows poverty reduction; 21% remain below the poverty line despite GDP growth (NITI Aayog).

Government Initiatives for Financial Inclusion

  1. Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY): Universal bank account access with zero balance, RuPay cards, and overdraft facility.
  2. Stand-Up India Scheme: Loans between ₹10 lakh–₹1 crore for women and SC/ST entrepreneurs to promote inclusive entrepreneurship.
  3. Mudra Yojana: Collateral-free loans up to ₹10 lakh for small businesses under Shishu, Kishor, and Ta-run categories.
  4. Digital India Initiative: Expands broadband (BharatNet) and digital payments infrastructure to bridge rural–urban banking gaps.
  5. Pradhan Mantri Suraksha Bima Yojana: Affordable accident insurance linked to bank accounts to boost account utility.
  6. National Strategy for Financial Inclusion (NSFI) 2019–24): RBI-led roadmap to ensure access to financial services for every adult by 2024.

Way Forward

  • Equal Services: RBI should mandate the exact processing times nationwide, cutting rural delays of up to 3 times (RBI).
  • Progressive Fee Structures: Income-linked or tiered penalty systems instead of a flat charge to protect 54% of Jan Dhan users with under ₹500 balance (MoF).
  • Digital Reach: Extend BharatNet and rural 5G to 6.5 lakh villages with multilingual, offline banking (DoT).
  • Credit Access: Use bill payments and microfinance records to score 190 million without credit histories.
  • Bank Report Cards: RBI to publish annual inclusion scores for all banks.

India’s vision of Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas, Sabka Vishwas needs banking that is equitable, dignified, and affordable beyond mere account-opening. Balancing profitability with social responsibility, as seen in the ICICI case, is key to making financial inclusion an actual engine of inclusive growth.

Reference: Live Mint

PMF IAS Pathfinder for Mains – Question 292

Q. To what extent does the debate between class banking and mass banking reflect the trade-off between profitability and equity in India’s banking sector? Discuss. (150 Words) (10 Marks)

Approach

  • Introduction: Write a contextual introduction by mentioning that ICICI Bank is raising the minimum balance requirement for urban customers to ₹50,000.
  • Body: Examine the trade-off between profitability and equity in India’s banking sector and propose a balanced approach for India.
  • Conclusion: Emphasis on balanced approach of equitable access, digital inclusion, and tiered banking promotes.

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