The National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI), in the third week of
August 2013 planned to broaden its shareholding by inducting 49 banks as
the shareholders. The capital of around 100 crore Rupees which is
contributed by the banks towards shareholding, will facilitate NPCI in
strengthening the retail payments infrastructure. It will also help in
bringing down the transaction costs in the entire banking system.
It
is important to note that at present, NPCI has ten main promoter banks
which include HSBC, Citibank, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Bank of India,
Union Bank of India, Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank, Punjab National Bank
and the State Bank of India. Because of being the non-profit company,
NPCI does not offer any dividend to these ten banks. All these banks
contribute 10 crore Rupees each in the paid-up capital of NPCI.
PwC
was also appointed as the consultant of NPCI in order to examine the
needs and aspirations of various banks for being a part of the NPCI
ownership.
NPCI drew two criterions on the basis of which 49
banks will be inducted as the shareholders. NPCI planned to get in all
banks with the business size of 1 lakh crore Rupees and above that
amount. At present, there are just around 35 such banks. Out of these 35
banks, 10 banks are already the members of NPCI. In the tier-II
category, i.e., banks with the business size of less than 1-lakh crore
Rupees, NPCCI will be inducting the shareholders on the basis of
payments or volume of the transactions which they give to the company.
Thereafter, NPCI will dilute.
About National Payments Corporation of India
• NPCI is the umbrella body for all retail payment systems in India.
•
The central bank of India, the Reserve Bank of India set up the Board
for Payment and Settlement Systems in 2005. Thereafter, RBI released a
document in which setting up of NPCI as an umbrella institution for all
the retail payment systems in India, was proposed.
• The primary aim
or objective of NPCI was consolidation as well as integration of
various systems with varying services into one common nation-wide
uniform and standard business process for all retail payment systems.
•
Apart from this, its objective was also to facilitate the affordable
payment mechanism for the benefit of people in India as well as for
helping in the financial inclusion.
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