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Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Remote E-Banking in India

Villagers gain access through biometric verification and cell-phones.

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.

Comments

  • a feudal society
    I believe it was a number of years ago that Macleans magazine published the figures which were factored into Indias growing population in order to determine what was necessary to build an infrastructure capable of sustaining its development. They were staggering, and I just don't know how they are going to meet such a challenge by themselves. The opportunities, therefore, for foreign companies looking to invest in a growing market economy, which desperately needs resource and logistical management, could very well eclipse those of Chinas. The land of a thousand gods has over a billion people looking hopefully to the future. I believe that in order to do that they have to divorce themselves from the past.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    phoenix
    08/13/2008
    Posts:172
    Avg Rating:
    3/5
    • Re: a feudal society
      Yes, fuedal (and fueding!) thinking is at the heart of Indian society. It will eventually change, but that change is going to take time. Meanwhile, given the short timescales involved, the changes that are going to need to be made have to be ones that work with the system. There isn't time to wait around for India's social revolution. e.g. take Power which is one of India's biggest drags on development. Instead of large scale power projects which are inevitably linked with corruption, ineptitude, delays, and cost overruns, not to mention transmission losses over a rickety transmission network, far better to start replacing all the polluting local power sources that Indians use (mostly diesel generators) with low cost wind or solar generators. Its that small change multiplied a billion times that will have an effect in India. Its the model that worked for telecommunications - rather than wait for india's phone land network cellphones got around that by giving each person a piece of the network.

      cheers
      Rate this comment: 12345

      snedunuri
      08/13/2008
      Posts:43
      Avg Rating:
      3/5
  • Quick Money Loans for "Remote E-Banking in India"
    Treasury Secretary Paulson’s Troubled Asset Relief Program was not the kind of credit repair scores the endangered homeowners needed. However, a new mortgage program is underway. Thanks to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp Chairman Sheila Bair, 1.5 million homeowners will have a sturdy backbone when they’re facing foreclosure. This $24.4 billion program will be drawn from the $700 billion pool that TARP set up. With this straightforward system, lenders will be given a fixed amount of $1,000 per loan they renegotiate with financially stuck homeowners. In addition, the FDIC has promised to take on up to 50 percent of the loss in the event of a default on a loan. While others view the action on Bair’s part as a needed investment to maintain liquidity in the mortgage industry, Paulson has predestined this, as mere spending that will only bankrupt the FDIC. Although this will no doubt require a lot of time to solve, it’s definitely a noble effort to help repair credit.

    Click to read more on Credit Repair
    Rate this comment: 12345

    QuickMoney
    11/22/2008
    Posts:3
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