Mobile banking will be the future wave
August 05, 2011
The
transaction costs of financial services to the poor are
‘exceedingly large' in comparison to their revenue generation
potential in the short term, according to Mr Anand Sinha, Deputy
Governor, Reserve Bank of India.
Speaking after presenting the banking technology awards of the
Institute for Development and Research in Banking Technology
(IDRBT), Mr Sinha said the existing banking business model was not
able to adequately address challenges like high transaction
costs.
“From the demand side too, there is financial illiteracy and
the consequent fear of approaching formal institutions,” he
said. More than 50 per cent of adult population was still excluded
from the financial sector, including many of the lower income
categories of urban population.
“This is largely because of the way in which supply of
financial services is organised,” Mr Sinha said.
Mobile banking
Referring to the use of technology in banking, the Deputy Governor
said mobile banking is the hottest area of development in the
banking sector and was expected to complement and, to an extent,
replace the credit/debit card system in future.
Using this technology for fund transfers and retail payments would
hold a huge potential.
The use of technology till now was mainly focussed on transaction
processing, data storage, service delivery.
“Now that the banking sector has reached a stage where many
such services are running on technology-enabled processes, we can
look forward to improving other areas such as internal management
processes and back-end processes,” Mr Sinha said.