80% of Indians now have a bank account. So why is financial inclusion low?
Business
Standard
By: Tish Sanghera May 17,
2018 07:48
No more
than 1% of PMJDY account holders-3.1 million beneficiaries-use overdraft
facilities available to them, and 17% of PMJDY accounts are 'zero-balance'.
Up to 80% of Indians now have a bank account, the
same proportion that have a mobile
phone, but financial inclusion levels are still among the world’s
worst, lower than sub-Saharan Africa on some counts, according to a new report.
Despite the availability of mobile-banking services
and the narrowing of gender, wealth and education gaps in account ownership,
few account holders are using facilities available to them, raising doubts
around improvements for financial inclusion, according to the latest Global Findex Survey released
by the World Bank in April 2018.
India’s unbanked population has been the target of
the government’s flagship Pradhan
Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY), or the Prime Minister’s
People’s Wealth Programme, launched in 2014. It has been largely responsible
for the rapid increase in opened accounts, the Global Findex report said.
No more than 1% of PMJDY account holders–3.1 million beneficiaries–use
overdraft facilities available to them, and 17% of PMJDY accounts are “zero-balance”, meaning they are not
used, recent datashow,
although that is down from 25% in 2016 and 75% in 2014.
There is no marked improvement in access to
formal credit, and 38% of Indian accounts are inactive–meaning,
there were no withdrawals or deposits over the course of a year–suggesting that
many Indians are still not integrated into the formal banking system.
Participation in and effective use of financial
services can help drive development goals by aiding investment in education and
health, helping to manage financial emergencies and reduce dependency on cash,
the report said.
India not yet benefitting
from mobile banking
The proportion of the Indian population accessing
financial institution accounts from their phones or the Internet, making
digital payments or using mobile money wallets is significantly lower than in
other developing economies.
In 2017, 5% of Indians accessed a financial
institution account from their phone or the Internet, and 2% of the population
owned a mobile money account, the
Global Findex datashow.
Compare this to sub-Saharan Africa, where 21% of
adults had a mobile money account in 2017, the highest anywhere in the world
and a 50% increase since 2014. Digital payments are also more widespread, with
97% of adults in Kenya making a digital payment in 2017 and 60% in South
Africa, compared to 29% in India.
Adults in these countries are moving towards financial
inclusion, bypassing traditional entry points and capitalising on the growth of
digital finance. The same cannot be said about India.
Despite addressing problems around access to
physical bank branches and the need to present specific documentation, often
cited as barriers to
financial inclusion, the majority of Indians are not yet experiencing the
benefits of mobile banking.
“Generally people are still not entirely
comfortable with using their phones for banking,” said Nishanth K., senior
research associate at Dvara Research, a financial systems policy research
institution. “There is a fundamental mis-trust in using phones or digital modes
to transact, particularly in rural areas.”
Digital India,
a government initiative launched in 2015 to improve internet connectivity,
digital literacy and the nation’s technology infrastructure, aims to increase
participation in the digital economy. Through mobile banking platforms,
cashless government benefit transfers and also increased awareness of these
services, it believes financial inclusion can be improved.
However, poor access to electricity and internet
penetration hinders connectivity in India, and may be a contributing factor to
slow adoption of mobile banking.
Internet penetration currently faces a rural-urban
divide. In December 2017, 65% of urban households had an internet connection
compared to 20% in rural india, according to a 2017 report released
by the Internet and Mobile Association of India.
The Bharat Net
Programme, a government scheme committed to spending $5.07 billion
(Rs 34,000 crore) to provide high-speed internet in 150,000 villages by 2019,
must double its efforts in the next year in order to reach its target.
Currently 67,271 villages have been connected, Your Story reported in
March 2018.
Equally, while mobile phone ownership is
increasing, many rural inhabitants still struggle
to access electricity for simple daily tasks–such as charging a
phone.
As many as 31 million households currently do not
have electricity, despite the 99.8% village electrification claims made by the Rural
Electrification Corporation Ltd (REC)–the agency appointed to execute the Deen
Dayal Upadhyaya Grameen Jyoti Yojana or ‘Power For All’ programme.
Using apps and online banking websites requires a
level of technical literacy and confidence that Indians in rural and low-income
areas often do not
possess.
An education gap persists regarding mobile account
access and digital payments. For example, 2% of those with a primary education
or less have used a mobile phone or the internet to access an account in 2017,
compared to 9% of those with a secondary education or less, the Global
Findex data show.
Nishanth K. believes India cannot rely on
technology alone to help reduce the numbers excluded from formal banking
services.
“Access isn’t necessarily synonymous with the use
of financial services,” he said. “While Global Findex data suggest access to financial services
might be high, consumers may decide not to use them–either voluntarily or
because opportunity costs are too high. While there is clearly a need for
insurance and pensions, we are still yet to see viable products for low-income
rural households.”
Financial literacy and
the gender gap
Female bank-account ownership increased by 79%
between 2014 and 2017. The gender gap, the difference between male and female
account ownership, also narrowed to 6 percentage points, down from a 20-percentage-point
gap three years ago.
These figures, along with a narrowing of wealth and
education gaps by 10 percentage points each, suggest traditional socio-economic
and gender barriers are no longer factors which impact upon successful access
to financial services.
However while female account ownership has
increased significantly to include 77% of all women in India, female
participation in financial services and financial literacy has not yet reached
similar levels.
No more than 22% of women owned a debit card in
2017, compared to 43% of men, according to Global Findex data. Similarly, 35% of
men said they had made or received a digital payment in 2017 compared to 22% of
women.
Low levels of engagement with the formal banking
sector beyond simple withdrawals and deposits by women and marginalised
sections of society suggest that universal account ownership does
not necessarily equate to financial inclusion or the ability to
use banking services effectively.
In 2015-16, 53% of women used a bank account in
their own name, according to the fourth National Family Health Survey data.
Financial literacy is defined by the OECD,
an intergovernmental economic organisation, as “a combination of awareness,
knowledge, skill, attitude and behaviour necessary to make sound financial
decisions”.
For rural women in particular, barriers to
financial literacy such as a lack of higher education and male-dominated social
structures still remain.
Knowledge of core banking services, online banking
and banks’ credit facilities had the lowest levels of understanding, according
to this 2017 study of
rural women in Tamil Nadu. The women surveyed understood better the different
bank account types available and the interest they offer; most were likely to
invest in gold than any other saving or investment product due to a lack of
understanding of these commercial services.
“One interesting solution to improve female
participation is to have more women as banking agents working in rural areas,”
said Nishanth K.
“Currently, 8% of banking agents are women and
three quarters work in rural areas; this perhaps indicates that they are better
able to reduce the gender imbalance around participation in financial
services,” said Nishanth K., quoting this May 2018 study by
MicroSave, a financial inclusion consulting firm.
Access to and the ability to use financial services
can empower women through
managing financial risk and increase savings for education and healthcare
spend.
However, account ownership alone does not equal
financial inclusion, and the lives of previously ‘unbanked’ women have not
necessarily improved as a result of owning an account.
While data show account
ownership increased by 79% since 2014, female empowerment indicators, such as
domestic abuse levels or access to reproductive health, have not improved at
the same time.
Several indicators have shown a decline, suggesting
levels of women’s empowerment have not improved. Only 53.5% women in the
reproductive age-group used modern methods of contraception in 2015-16, a
decline from 56.3% in 2005-06, according to data from the
National Family Health Survey, 2015-16, IndiaSpend reported in
January 2018. In 2015-16, 28.8% of married women faced spousal violence; in
rural areas the figure is 31.1%.
Reference:-http://www.business-standard.com/article/finance/80-of-indians-now-have-a-bank-account-so-why-is-financial-inclusion-low-118051700150_1.html
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