Coordinated Approach at District Level Needed for Inclusion for the Last Mile
Major macro-economic parameters for May 2021 continue to reveal that the economy has been deeply hit by the second wave, though they are seen to be stabilizing in June. The Markit PMI Services index reporting a contraction for the first time in eight months in May; the PMI Manufacturing index just about stayed in the expansion zone, but was the lowest in ten months; the unemployment rate rose further in May as per CMIE data; GST collections dipped compared to April but stayed above the INR one lakh crore for the eighth consecutive month.
The demand for jobs has been high and MGNREGS has been working, despite casualities amongst staff from Covid-19. The Supreme Court has also lent its weight behind the One Nation One Ration Card scheme and has called for States and UTs to implement the scheme. The Union government has extended the free rations scheme to poor households till the end of this year. With a good monsoon forecast, record procurement of wheat already and hike in MSPs for the kharif crop, rural incomes should get some support.
However, the pace of vaccination has not picked up and unlocking will be measured across the country, keeping downside risks high. Statements by key decisionmakers suggest that this should change soon, though no official commitment is yet available.
The RBI has also given more relief after its June Monetary Policy Committee meeting, including increased liquidity support to SIDBI and contact-intensive sectors, expanding the threshold limit under Resolution 2.0, and announcing the operation of the National Automated Clearing House (NACH) on all days of the week, which will smooth Direct Benefit Transfer payouts.
UNDP has released its assessment of the Aspirational Districts Programme. While progress in these districts has been lauded, the report calls for more attention to financial inclusion and skill development, which have been moving ahead at a slower pace than the other indicators. Part of the problem is the absence of a dedicated department (unlike healthcare, for example) and poor coordination at the district level. The overall lack of trust and comfort with the banking channel was also highlighted as a challenge to overcome, and the deployment of women agents in Ranchi district was mentioned as one of the solutions.
The RBI Working Group on Digital Lending constituted in January of this year is yet to release its report, meanwhile read V. Anantha Nageswaran and Badal Malick (Mint, 7th June 2021) giving six choices and approaches that lenders must take for sustainable and profitable financial services to the underserved. The authors make the key point that responsible fintech and good governance are pre-requisites that will “not only lower greatly the burden on already-stretched regulators, but also avert a situation of regulatory overkill that could apply indiscriminately to all players.”
Do also read the Indicus White Paper on Digital Lending in India, which lists out the issues and challenges and puts forth specific actionable points for all stakeholders - NBFCs/banks, platforms like Google and Apple, the regulator and the borrowers.
Some Other Highlights
The RBI has released a Consultative Document on Regulation of Microfinance, requesting feedback from the public by July 31, 2021.
MicroSave reports on the impact of the pandemic and lockdown in 2020 on low-income households and evaluates the impact of the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana.
A report on the Public Distribution System by MicroSave shows how food reached the needy despite stringent lockdowns.
Dvara continues its series on exclusions in Direct Benefit Transfers – read how data entry error leads to failure of cash transfer in PM-KISAN.
Ajay Bhushan Pandey writes on the digital payments boom enabling financial inclusion in India.
Ram Rastogi analyses the drop in payments in UPI in May.
The RBI raises interchange fees for ATMs, revised upwards for the first time since 2014
Sophie Falsini of CGAP explains that time is money for rural women and financial services can help rural women save more of it.
Sumita Kale and Prashant Girbane write on the need for a coordinated drive at the Ministry of MSME for digitalization.
Rina Chandran brings out the existing issues in digital lending apps, that may still miss out on providing credit to the traditionally underserved segments, especially women.