By AP Singh, Ministry of Finance
The Post Bank (India Post Payments Bank) the Prime Minister spoke so affectionately about from the ramparts of the Red Fort shouldn't end up being another public sector entity in an already crowded financial services sector.
Digital India requires not just vanilla bank accounts but widespread ability to make and receive electronic payments. The Post bank, designed as a service platform for the financial services sector rather than a narrow competing entity, can play an important role in fast tracking cashless India. We look here at the first scaled up application of the India stack.
Governments do better facilitating and servicing their corporate than competing with them. The Post Bank funded out of public exchequer, leveraging the network of the post office, reach of the postman and brand value of the Government of India needs to transmit resultant value to the entire industry rather appropriate it by itself.
From the customer point of view, this will translate into walking into a post office (more than 155,000), tapping the postman (more than 300,000) or logging on to a single application on a smart device to transact with a service provider of choice.
For retail financial service providers like banks, payment service providers, mutual funds, insurance companies, pension fund managers, forex service providers and money transfer companies, it will mean extended reach to customers and cost saving on high street presence.
For the Post Bank, a platform approach will have several advantages. For one, it will work from a known position of strength of a common service provider rather than a competing agency, something the public sector is not adept.Second, it will be able to garner numbers in a high volume, low margin business. Third, it will attract foot falls from across the board providing cross-selling opportunities. Click below to know more
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