Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Remote E-Banking in India
Villagers gain access through biometric verification and cell-phones.
By David Talbot
Kasaghatta, India: It's a 90-minute walk from this southern
Indian village--one of 730,000 in India--to Doddabenavengala, the
nearest town with a bank branch. Until a few months ago, Karehanumaiah, a 55-year-old
agricultural laborer, had no bank account, which also meant he had no access to
formal credit. (He would have to pay 10 percent monthly interest to informal
lenders to, say, borrow $45 to buy a goat.) But that all changed in recent
months.
In this video, Karehanumaiah uses a desktop terminal to deposit
150 rupees (about $3.50) into his new account at Corporation Bank, with help
from Muniyamma Ramanjanappa, a village resident who conducts these transactions
in her concrete house as a bank representative. First, a smart card and a thumbprint
scan prove his identity. Next, Ramanjanappa updates the bank balance
information on his smart card by connecting the terminal to the bank database
with a cell phone. Finally, Karehanumaiah hands Ramanjanappa the cash and gets
a receipt for his deposit (which brings his balance up to 160 rupees). To their
left is Ram Sirupurapu, executive director of Integra Microsystems, the maker
of the terminal. Ramanjanappa makes weekly trips to the Doddabenavengala branch
with the cash. And now that Karehanumaiah has a bank account, he can borrow
money from the bank at rates of between 8.5 and 13 percent annually--far less
than in the informal system--and gain a toehold into the formal economy.
Ninety percent of India's rural residents lack bank
accounts, and a variety of technologies are being applied to the problem. Other
efforts include using cell phones to make payments and execute bank
transactions in a nation that is enrolling a staggering eight million new cell-phone
accounts monthly, many of them in rural areas.
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