Nilekani opens credit infrastructure to aid small businesses
Hindustan Time
July 22, 2020
Nilekani
opens credit infrastructure to aid small businesses
Speaking at the Global
Fintech Festival, 2020 on Wednesday, Nilekani, co-founder and non-executive
chairman of Infosys Ltd, described the initiative as a credit protocol
infrastructure called the Open Credit Enablement Network or OCEN.
Aadhaar architect Nandan
Nilekani says the initiative will help utilise innovative credit products at
scale.
A major new technological
innovation is in the works connecting lenders with the marketplace, Aadhaar
architect Nandan Nilekani announced on Wednesday, as he buttressed the need for
India to “democratise credit” for millions of small businesses to revive its
virus-battered economy.
Speaking at the Global
Fintech Festival, 2020 on Wednesday, Nilekani, co-founder and non-executive
chairman of Infosys Ltd, described the initiative as a credit protocol
infrastructure called the Open Credit Enablement Network or OCEN, built by the
Indian Software Product Industry Roundtable (iSpirt), a think-tank of the
software industry.
Under these new credit
rails, OCEN will act as a common language, connecting lenders and marketplaces
to utilise and create innovative financial credit products at scale.
Aggregators will be using this programming interface to embed credit offerings
in their applications , which in turn will play a crucial role in democratising
access to credit and lowering interest rates for borrowers. iSpirt is
partnering with the State Bank of India, HDFC Bank Ltd, ICICI Bank Ltd, IDFC
First Bank Ltd, Axis Bank Ltd and Bajaj Finserv Ltd for this new credit rail.
“Apart from the digitisation
of the lending process, we have data stores through the Account Aggregator (AA)
network, and for credit to move seamlessly to small businesses, lenders will
need to have a common protocol. Just like what UPI did with payments,” Nilekani
said. “We are working on a common language for lenders and borrowers, called
the Open Credit Enablement Network protocol, which will have a dramatic impact
to enable small businesses to get loans.”
In July, last year, Nilekani
introduced the Account Aggregator (AA) platform, a digital public
infrastructure developed in collaboration with major Indian financial
regulators, to manage data on behalf of consumers and streamline its access to
payment and financial service providers.
“Lenders focus on
blue-collared workforce want to solve cost and data asymmetry. Cost is solved
by digitisation and asymmetry is solved by the Account Aggregator model. Now,
credit protocol (OCEN) will democratise the process for millions of small
businesses. For our economy to revive we need to fund small businesses,”
Nilekani said at the virtual event.
He emphasised that many
micro-enterprises, which constitute India’s backbone, don’t have access to
credit, with a large portion of India’s lending capital still going to large
enterprises.
This is despite the
digitisation of India’s credit economy, which now allows for shorter duration
and small ticket loans, reducing the cost of new credit disbursements.
“Small businesses don’t get
loans because there is no data around them and the AA helps in data asymmetry.
Data is important and reflected in different activities of the business. For
example, GST data on a merchant’s billings can be used by small businesses to
get a loan or data from marketplaces like GeM which can be used to track a
merchant’s billing in order to give a loan,” Nilekani added.
He also said that when
public systems are developed, one needs to think about how a billion Indians
can participate in the infrastructure.
“We need to get a billion
people to participate in the public infrastructure we develop, and have a
solution for everyone in the country and be inclusive when we think about these
public systems,” said Nilekani.
During India’s
demonetisation, retail organisation National Payments Corporation of India
(NPCI) added feature phone capabilities to make Unified Payments Interface
(UPI) ready for feature phones. But UPI transactions still come majorly from
smartphones and Aadhaar Enabled Payment System (AePs) has helped individuals in
Tier 2 and 3 towns for withdrawals.
“We need to do something
about feature phone payments so we can expand digital payments to everyone,”
added Nilekani. “You need to bring public digital goods and public digital
rails and let private players build on it. The internet and GPS is a great
example where the US government worked on it and private players like Google,
Facebook and Amazon are building on it.”
Reference: https://www.hindustantimes.com/business-news/nilekani-opens-credit-infra-to-aid-small-businesses/story-ugUbWiY4hjz3LzLZn0WXxJ.html
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