India Post to install 3000 ATMs,1.35
lakh micro-ATMs by September 2015
MUMBAI: Even as its
application to start a commercial bank is pending, India Post has drawn a massive plan to install as many as 3,000 ATMs and 1.35
lakh micro-ATMs at the ubiquitous post offices across the country for savings
account holders by September 2015, a top official has said.
"We will be starting
with three ATMs to be installed in New Delhi, Chennai and Bangalore on February
5 and then ramp it up gradually," postal department secretary Padmini
Gopinath told a select group of reporters here over the
weekend.
She said 1,000 ATMs with the India Post
branding will be put in within the first year, which will be ramped up
massively to 3,000 in the next 18 months.
To start with, the ATMs can be used only by 26
crore savings account-holders who save with the postal department, but Gopinath
exuded confidence that within six months of the launch, they will get the
interoperability permission from the Reserve Bank.
Postal savings are worth around Rs 6.05
trillion, which is half the savings in the largest lender SBI and more than double that of the largest private sector lender ICICI Bank.
Through interoperability, India Post will join
the National Financial Switch, which will benefit India Post account holders to
transact at the banks' ATMs and vice versa, she added.
India Post has been working with software
major Infosys on this project, she added.
The micro ATMs will be handheld devices to be
operated at the post office level while the ATM will be similar to the one operated by any commercial bank, she
added.
The postal department, which has 1.55 lakh
post offices over 90 per cent of which are in villages, offers the savings
account to people across the country and pays an interest of 4 per cent per
annum for such deposits. The account offers cheque facility at present.
It can be noted that the Department of Posts
is fighting a very contentious battle to convert itself into a full fledged
bank, asserting that its reach can help achieve the goal of financial
inclusion.
However, the finance ministry has expressed some reservations about the idea, while Telecom
Minister Kapil Sibal has exuded confidence of winning over his Cabinet
colleagues to get the go ahead for the 'Postal Bank'.
source:The Economic Times
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