Transcript
Page 1: DIRECT BENEFIT TRANSFER IN INDIA: A STRATEGY PAPER FOR FINANCIAL INCLUSION

STRATEGY PAPER ON

DIRECT BENEFIT TRANSFER: HOW TO MAKE IT HAPPEN

BY

A.V.V.PRASAD ADDITIONAL COMMISSIONER

RURAL DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT GOVERNMENT OF ANDHRA PRADESH

HYDERABAD 9676123427: [email protected]

PROJECT REPORT IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF

ADVANCED PROGRAM IN STRATEGIC

MANAGEMENT

INDIAN INSTITUTE OF MANAGEMENT

CALCUTTA

18th JULY 2013

NB: The paper is kept in public domain for general good. The contents reflect personal views of

the author and not of any Government or IIMC. Comments and suggestions are welcome by

email. Contents may be used for any legal purpose, with due acknowledgement and no risk to

the author for accuracy, success or failure of implementation.

Page 2: DIRECT BENEFIT TRANSFER IN INDIA: A STRATEGY PAPER FOR FINANCIAL INCLUSION

DIRECT BENEFIT TRANSFER: MEANING:

Transfer of Benefits from Government to the Residents: Subsidies,

Pensions, Scholarships, MGNREGA Wages, etc. to the Beneficiary’s bank

account and payment of cash at their doorstep.

Essential aspects:

Benefits are credited to beneficiary’s bank account, based on AADHAAR.

Duplicates & ghosts are weeded out from databases of user departments

and banks.

Cash is paid to the beneficiary at doorstep.

Financial Inclusion: Outreach of banking services to all residents,

including the poorest and those located in remote areas.

DBT: The System:

1. Unique Identification Authority of India-UIDAI: Enrolls citizens and

gives each a 12 digit Unique Identification Number.

2. Central Identities Data Repository-CIDR maintains national repository of

biometric identities of residents enrolled by the UIDAI.

3. National Payments Corporation of India-NPCI maintains Aadhaar

Payment Bridge System and Aadhaar Enabled Payment System,

operates Inter-bank Switch, transacts online with Banks on Core

Banking Solution platform.

4. Banks open accounts for residents, using their UID for KYC (Know Your

Customer) for proof identity and address. Bank links the account

number and UID on APBS mapper.

5. Technology Service Provider: To provide hardware and software services

to banks to facilitate outreach of banking/financial services.

6. Business Correspondent: Private corporate agency, a banking

intermediary to manage outreach operations (management of cash &

CSPs).

7. Customer Service Provider (CSP): a resident villager/ acting as agent of

BC to deliver payments & banking services at village level with the help

of networked hand-held Point of Sale machine called Micro ATM.

Page 3: DIRECT BENEFIT TRANSFER IN INDIA: A STRATEGY PAPER FOR FINANCIAL INCLUSION

8. User Agency: Department/undertaking of Government of India or State

Government or local body intends to deliver benefits to residents having

an electronic database of residents with their UIDs.

9. Resident enrolls with UIDAI, gets UID number, opens account with bank,

accesses benefits/services from Government agencies in his own village

or anywhere he likes.

DBT: The Process:

A. User agency (Government Department) sends a file to their bank

consisting of a list of beneficiaries and benefits containing only three

fields UID number and amount to be credited.

B. Bank debits user agency account and forwards the file to NPCI adding

bank data.

C. NPCI credits accounts linked to the UIDs. Thus UID is like financial

address of the resident.

D. Resident approaches CSP for payment. CSP accesses account online,

pays cash to customer taking his finger print biometric authentication

on micro ATM; issues transaction print out.

Direct Benefit Transfer: Services delivered

1. Credit of benefits to bank account with UID as financial address.

2. Payment of Cash at village level.

3. Inter-operable across banks and service providers, accessible

anywhere.

Financial Inclusion:

4. Basic Banking Services.

5. Deposits: Savings, Recurring, Fixed Deposits

6. Micro advances or overdraft.

7. Remittances across place, bank, person.

8. Micro Insurance.

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DBT: MERITS OF THE SYSTEM

1. OUTREACH OF BANKING SERVICES:

A. There are 6 lakh villages in India. They are served by a mere 30000

rural branches of banks.

B. Over 51% of population in India has no access to banking or financial

services.

C. Most of the accounts opened as part of Financial Inclusion Plan over

the last 7 years, are not useful for the poor, as there are not enough

branches or staff to serve them. Business Correspondent System is not

functioning in most of the villages. So there are only accounts and no

transactions for most of the poor.

D. Payments and banking services can now be delivered to the poor in

their own village: robust and reliable system, saving time and money.

E. Aadhaar as KYC (Know Your Customer): proof of identity & address.

2. REDUCTION IN WASTAGE & CORRUPTION:

A. Eliminates duplicate & ghost beneficiaries

B. Detects impersonation, misrepresentation, ineligible beneficiaries, and

fraud.

C. Huge savings in Government expenditure on welfare schemes:

Potential Business of DBT in Annual Volumes*:

Benefits from Union Government: Rs. 3 lakh crores

Benefits from Governments of States: Rs. 4 lakh crores

Savings from elimination of ghosts, duplicates & ineligible persons: 10% to

30%

Expected Annual Savings: Rs. 140000 crores.

* Research required to collect exact expenditure values.

Page 5: DIRECT BENEFIT TRANSFER IN INDIA: A STRATEGY PAPER FOR FINANCIAL INCLUSION

3. Huge business opportunity for Banks.

A. Annual Volume of DBT Payments: Rs. 7 lakh crores.

Expected Revenue: 2% Service Charge:

Rs. 14000 crores.

B. Basic Banking services under Financial Inclusion Plan: Rs. 4 lakh

crores.

Expected Revenue from basic banking & FI services: Rs. 12000 crores.

4. Financial Integration of Rural India:

A. Now financial transactions can flow freely even to the remote areas,

covering the poor and marginalized sections.

B. Aadhaar works as proof of identity and proof of address for the

residents and facilitates instantaneous opening of bank account and

delivery of services.

5. Efficient Government:

A. Better targeting and delivery of services and benefits to the poor.

B. CIDR provides safe storage of resident data and reliable service of

biometric authentication as a public utility.

C. Backbone for hassle free financial services for inclusive growth.

Gold Mine of Opportunity, but no Gold Rush

1. Annual Savings of Rs.140000 crores for Govt.

2. Annual Revenue of Rs.26000 crores for Banks.

3. People are waiting for services. Serving the poor is an attractive

business opportunity.

4. The poor deserve financial services and Service must be seen as a

right for inclusive growth.

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5. Technology has come of age & robust systems are in place.

6. DBT launched in January 2013, but moving very slowly.

7. UID delivery crossed 25%, 50% in many States, but Banks have not

positioned Micro ATMs. Few takers for grant from UIDAI.

8. SBI Group and nationalized banks are not on board. Banks prefer to

wait & watch.

9. Financial Inclusion Products and services are not rolled out.

Trigger the Gold Rush: A Strategic Approach:

1. Neutralize First-mover disadvantages and create First-mover

advantage:

1.1. The greatest inhibitor is that a UID is linked to the account of the latest

bank on APB mapper. The first mover loses his customers in no

time to the latest predator. All the time and money spent on

reaching out to customers will be a colossal waste. Therefore,

all banks love to wait and watch. DBT will take ages to roll out in

this paradigm. The new rule can be:

A. The first bank to seed the account and make payment on AEPS retains

the seeding for a period of one year as the default banker.

B. Any other competing bank can open bank account and link it on APB

with their IIN.

C. At the end of one year, which ever bank makes the maximum number

of AEPS payments in the year for the UID, will become the default

banker for the UID. In case of a tie, old bank continues.

D. Any UID based credit on APBS or debit on AEPS will be routed to the

defaulter banker.

E. User departments will credit benefits by default based on UID.

F. Citizen can access front-end services from any bank or BC in the

interoperable scenario.

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2. Policy trails practice:

2.1. Stakeholders are not identified, positioned and facilitated. Their

compensation is not defined. Uncertainty looms large. There is

no business case for anyone.

2.2. Pain Point: Risk of Wrong Authentication by false acceptance: UIDAI

wants Banks to take the risk. Banks have refused and stayed out,

rightly so. UIDAI can create a Fund to cover the risks of

wrong seeding and false acceptance. Risk may be covered upto

Rs.10000/- per transaction, duly charging a risk premium.

2.3. Law is required to cover the new field of biometric enrollments,

storage of data, its use for financial transactions and risk of misuse,

fraud, protection of actions done in good faith, recovery of amounts

credited wrongly, issues of privacy, etc.

2.3. Post Office as Bank: Department of Posts has extensive branch

network and large savings account base, a money order system and

a postal life insurance. They have gained adequate experience in

Andhra Pradesh in payment of MGNREGA Wages and Social Security

Pensions. They need to modernize, come on Core Banking Solution,

obtain a Banking license, recruit and train personnel to take over FI

operations and payments.

2.4. Supply of Micro ATMs:

6 lakh villages need micro ATMs. Sourcing them is a big challenge.

Should a PSU produce them internally?

2.5. Universal Service Obligation: Service as a Right. Banks should be

called on to step in and extend services to unserved areas and

clientele, if they should have to access high value business in urban

areas. Enterprise and innovation in financial inclusion shall outreach

as many banking services as possible under financial inclusion

sector.

2.6. There should be no service tax on financial inclusion services for a

period of five or ten years.

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3. Appointment of Business Correspondents:

3.1. To learn from the experience:

A. Though B.C. System was initiated by RBI in 2006, their service

charges were not defined. Banks were expected to employ TSP, BC,

CSP and render services under corporate social responsibility or

universal service obligation at nominal charges with little regard for

the cost of service. Remuneration for services and stakes of service

providers were not determined properly. Thus BC system failed to

achieve financial inclusion.

B. Common RFP for Appointment of BCs:

Banks have little or no experience in appointing and managing BCs.

Therefore common RFP was floated for all public sector banks. It

failed to take off, as ridiculously low rates were taken by the

contending BCs.

How public sector banks will appoint BCs, procure microATMs and

position them at what terms and in what timelines is THE GREAT

UNCERTAINITY OF THE HOUR.

C. Private Banks and Business Correspondents: On the other hand, the

private sector banks, especially the ICICI Bank and Axis Bank have

demonstrated willingness to take risks and the capability to put in

place a working system for DBT.

4. ANDHRA PRADESH SMART CARD PROJECT of Rural Development

Department of Government of Andhra Pradesh: Visionary

Leadership in Electronic Benefit Transfer for payment of

MGNREGA Wages and Social Security Pensions:

A. All Gram Panchayats in the State are allotted to Banks or post office.

Banks engaged services of business correspondents.

B. Payments in progress in 95% of Villages. Beneficiaries are paid at GP

office, post office or at doorstep.

C. Benefits are directly credited to beneficiary accounts in bank/post

office and paid to beneficiaries.

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D. Local SHG Woman or local post office as last mile service delivery

point with a handheld PoS machine/microATM.

E. Biometric authenticated payments of the pre-Aadhaar era.

F. MGNREGA Wages paid once a week and Social Security Pensions paid

once a month.

G. 15 million accounts, Rs.11000 crores since 2007; Rs.4091 crores

during FY 2012-13.

H. AP leads in enrollments and payments on the Aadhaar platform too.

AEPS was launched in East Godavari district on 6.1.2013.

I. AP is gearing to be the first Universal Aadhaar State.

J. Government of Andhra Pradesh pays 2% of the amount disbursed as

commission to smart card banks. This model inspired the APBS-

AEPS also, but there is no clarity for stakeholders. Clear definition

of stakes and their delivery system are required to inspire

stakeholder participation.

K. Many banks and post office participated in AP Smart Card Project

and gained knowledge and skills which can be gainfully adopted

expeditious roll out of DBT on aadhaar platform.

5. Path-breaking work: Support required for success of DBT:

5.1. First-mover Banks (as also States) have to test the system and

initialize it. They do path-breaking work, encountering

resistance to change from primary and secondary stakeholders.

They take responsibility in the front-end for failures of the

back-end and for all system bottlenecks. Delays in roll out of the

entire system and its stabilization result in time and cost over-

runs.

6. To facilitate transition: neutralize inhibitors, resolve

bottlenecks.

6.1. Banks to appoint Business Correspondents

6.2. BC to appoint Customer Service Providers

6.3. Bank/BC to position Micro ATMs & start services.

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6.4. Banks to enable inter-operability with other banks.

6.5. Bank/BC to set up Cash management system.

6.6. User Departments to seed their databases.

6.7. Banks to seed their customers with UID and link accounts on APB

mapper.

6.8. User departments to send APBS payorders.

6.9. Exception Handling Procedures:

2 to 5% of residents may not have the fingerprint quality required

for online authentication. Common Exception handling procedures

need to be incorporated in the rules by the regulator and adopted

by all banks. Adequate safeguards should be provided against

misuse of the facility. Messenger payment as provided in post office

savings account rules may be adopted by banks also. One Time

Password sent by SMS to linked mobile is another alternative.

7. Reward System: Identify Stakeholders and reward the value

chain activities:

There should be a business case for every participant activity and

stakeholder. It should be clearly defined and delivered. It should

be fixed by regulator and be left to contracting by individual banks.

It should meet the costs and also give room for profit. DBT will lead

to mainstreaming financial inclusion as a separate line of business,

calling for special expertise with its own volumes and design of

products and services.

7.1. Sponsored Bank: (easy work: any bank can do it with office

at State/district headquarters): Maintains User department

accounts and initiates APB transactions to credit benefits and shares

feedback file. This is work is relatively simple and is generally

compensated by the float enjoyed by the bank in User department

accounts. If sponsored bank is unduly paid more, banks with

greater clout will rather prefer to lobby for User Department

account, than toil in the heat of the last mile to extend services to

the end customer.

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Recommended Remuneration: 0.15% only to cover costs of APBS &

risk fund for wrong seeding losses.

7.2. Beneficiary Bank: one-time effort to acquire customer is critical to the

system: To access the beneficiary and open accounts, collect and

seed the aadhaar numbers in their database and link them on the

APB mapper; maintenance of the accounts on the CBS server with

obligation to extend service as paying bank also.

Recommended Remuneration: 0.25%.

7.3. Paying Bank- CRITICAL LAST MILE SERVICE: To appoint BC, CSP, to

position & maintain micro ATM in the village and make cash

available and render all front-end services at the cutting edge. It is

the hardest part of the work to make timely payments ONE TIME &

EVERY TIME. It is the Proof of the Pudding! Without this service,

benefits will sit on bank server, beneficiary cannot access them.

Recommended Remuneration: Gross: 2.15% (inclusive of

BC/CSP/TSP/ AEPS/Risk Fund 0.4%+0.4%+1%+0.1+0.05%) Net:

0.2%.

7.4. Business Correspondent to appoint and manage CSPs and cash

movement from bank to CSP and back together with attendant

risks.

Recommended Remuneration: 0.4%.

7.5. Technology Service Provider: hardware and software services.

Recommended Remuneration: 0.4%.

7.6. Customer Service Provider: Locally resident to extend service at

village level: To hold cash balance and make payments.

Recommended Remuneration: 1%.

7.7. APBS: Aadhaar Payment Bridge System for credit of benefits to

beneficiary accounts: Public Utility on no-profit basis.

Recommended Remuneration: 0.05% for ON US Transaction &

0.10% for OFF US Transaction plus 0.5% for Risk Fund for loss due

to wrong credit/wrong seeding.

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7.8. AEPS: Aadhaar Enabled Payment System: Biometric Authentication for

transactions: Public utility on no-profit basis. Recommended

remuneration: 0.15% (0.10 for authentication of payment and

0.05% towards Risk Fund to cover loss due to wrong payment in

false acceptance).

7.9. Fund to cover Risks of Loss due to Wrong credit because of wrong

seeding & Loss due to wrong payment due to false acceptance:

0.05% on APBS & 0.05% AEPS.

Total Cost of DBT for User Agency: 2.55%.

(A good bargain for Scheme savings of 10% to 30% by removal of ghosts &

duplicates, gains of time & effort with delivery of benefits at door-

step, financial inclusion and better governance)

7.10. All functionaries (TSP/BC/CSP) should be provided with

special FI Accounts which can be credited with their share of

remuneration instantly or on day-end settlement basis.

7.11. Cash Management: Supply of cash in inter-operable scenario:

BC-CSP should be allowed to draw cash from any bank

branch or ATM to make DBT Payments upto Rs. One lakh per

day.

8. Create Demand Pull:

8.1. No need to wait for the last resident to be enrolled and given aadhaar.

Start service-delivery at village point to persons having aadhaar.

Even at 25% or 50% coverage of the population, operations are

quite profitable.

8.2. Service availability will cut across resistance from vested interests

opposing aadhaar.

8.3. It will also motivate all remaining residents to enroll for aadhaar, to

share their aadhaar with user departments and banks.

8.4. AP experience shows universal acceptance & satisfaction in terms of

savings in time and money to travel and stand in long queues for

service at the bank branch in a different village, greater visibility

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and accountability in electronic payments; delays in payment

tracked, penalized and tackled.

9. Work in Mission Mode:

9.1. Campaign to complete enrolments for AADHAAR.

9.2. Expedite generation, issue & delivery of UIDs.

9.3. Set up Permanent Enrolment Centers for residual enrolments and for

updating existing records.

9.4. Now there is a Mission Director for DBT at the Centre; every State may

have a State Mission Director to lead the roll out locally.

10. If it is so BIG, give it what it takes (WIT):

10.1. To realize the business volume of Rs.11 lakh crore, it takes a lot of

man power, infrastructure, planning and management.

10.2. There is work to do, if Government looks at savings of Rs.140000

crores per annum, if banks want to partake in Rs.26000 crores

revenue per annum.

Udyamenahi siddhyanti kaaryani, na manoradhaihi; Nahi shuptasya simhsya, pravishanti mukhe mrigaha.

(Only through enterprise are great things accomplished, not by mere desire.

If the lion sleeps, the prey would not walk into his gaping mouth. - Bhartruhari)

10.3. Build on Strengths: Public Sector Banks have long tried to manage

Financial Inclusion without dedicated FI officers and staff.

Obviously they failed. Private Sector Banks with the freedom to hire

additional resources have done much better. All Grameen Banks

have to come on Core Banking Solution and on aadhaar platform

for APBS and AEPS. Extensive rural branch network is the

Strength of public sector banks and regional rural banks. They can

build on it. However, they need to position one FI officer in every

rural branch exclusively to manage the specialty business of

financial inclusion and manage the BC-CSP network offering a whole

Page 14: DIRECT BENEFIT TRANSFER IN INDIA: A STRATEGY PAPER FOR FINANCIAL INCLUSION

range of banking and financial services, linked to the service area

branch. It is a whopping 35000 new rural bank officers, to

recruit and train!

10.4. Service Area Approach: Boon or bane: A case for freedom of

choice to customer:

6 lakh villages in the country are attached to 35000 rural branches

of banks under the service area approach. No services could be

delivered by limited staff manning so few branches for so many

poor people with high volume transactions of low value. Now that

ICT opens up a possibility, the field should be thrown open for

banks to offer services and for customer to choose among them.

Even the private sector banks or whoever is willing to serve, shall

have a level-playing ground.

10.5. The Rights View: Service as a right!

All residents shall have access to banking and financial services

even if they happen/choose to live in rural areas. Urban areas and

rural areas support each other. Now more than ever, service shall

reach out to them, because technology makes it possible and

viable.

10.6. Broadbase the system and make it universal and ubiquitous:

The services can be made accessible to residents through multiple

agents across banks, multiple establishments, multiple channels

like biometric ATMs, through Rupay Cards, mobile banking,

etc. It can cover as many services as possible. Rural biometric

ATMs with solar modules may be positioned on site at all rural

branches. Rupay debit cards may be issued to all customers. No

risk of delayed payment, no need to compensate for delayed

payments; if it is visualized, it can be realized!

10.7. Jobs for a million functionaries:

There is need for at least one Customer Service Providers with a

handheld micro-ATM to render last mile service in each of the 6

lakh villages; bigger villages may require more CSPs. We shall add

Page 15: DIRECT BENEFIT TRANSFER IN INDIA: A STRATEGY PAPER FOR FINANCIAL INCLUSION

a few lakhs to cover the urban poor: over a million customer

service providers would be required in the country for DBT and for

FI services.

11. The Great Leadership Question:

Have we not men with us royal, Men the masters of things!

-Swinburne

Now more than ever, there is political will; there is a robust system

and delivery mechanism built on aadhaar platform and an awareness

of its value. Hope India will make it!

It is a “eleven trillion rupee per annum” question: all real, nothing

imaginary about it!

Let Policy, Planning and Management join hands.

A brave new financial revolution is in the making!

The importance of adopting right strategy cannot be

overemphasized.

Leadership sets the goals and Strategy shows the way!

STRATEGY IS A CRITICAL SUCCESS FACTOR.

IT IS AT THE HEART OF ENTERPRISE TO ENSURE SUCCESS.

Let us do it!


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