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This article was first published 10 years ago

How Bandhan won the banking licence

April 03, 2014 08:50 IST


Photographs: Courtesy, Bandhan

Bandhan Financial Services, the first microfinance institution in the country to win a bank licence, is also one of the youngest entities to be allowed to enter the banking space.

The Reserve Bank of India on Wednesday granted "in-principle" approval for banking licences to infrastructure financing firm IDFC and Bandhan from among 25 applicants, including corporate heavyweights ADAG Group, Aditya Birla Group and Bajaj Group.

Bandhan was the only microfinance institution that applied for a banking licence.

Set up in 2001 by Chandra Shekhar Ghosh, Kolkata-based Bandhan began with a focus on working with "socially disadvantaged and economically exploited women," according to its website.

How Bandhan won the banking licence

Image: Chandra Shekhar Ghosh, founder of Bandhan.
Photographs: Courtesy, Bandhan

 

Set up in 2001 by Chandra Shekhar Ghosh, Kolkata-based Bandhan began with a focus on working with "socially disadvantaged and economically exploited women," according to its website.

 

With 2,016 branches across 22 states and Union territories, Bandhan had over 52.33 lakh borrowers as of February. It disbursed Rs 963 crore of loans in February and has total loans outstanding of Rs 5,704 crore.

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How Bandhan won the banking licence

Image: Bandhan team
Photographs: Courtesy, Bandhan

The RBI said it assessed the quantitative and qualitative aspects of the applicants, including their financial statements, 10-year track record of running businesses, proposed business model for the bank and demonstrated capabilities for running a bank, plan for expanding inclusion, and culture of compliance and integrity.

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Tags: RBI

How Bandhan won the banking licence

Image: eth A Payne, US Consul General being felicitated by C S Ghosh, CMD at the head office of Bandhan.
Photographs: Courtesy, Bandhan

Bandhan said the award of the banking licence was a recognition of the microfinance sector and their hard work to reach unbanked areas and provide financial services.

"We will be able to offer full-fledged banking services to the poor people," Bandhan Chairman and Managing Director Ghosh said.

Microfinance institutions had come under government scrutiny in 2010 after allegations that their strong-arm recovery tactics had led to a spate of suicides by borrowers.

The Andhra Pradesh Micro Finance Institutions (Regulation of Money lending) Act, 2010, was passed to ensure that the state government had oversight on the sector. The Act massively hit the microfinance business in Andhra Pradesh, which accounted for almost 30 per cent of the total of Rs 30,000 crore in the country.

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How Bandhan won the banking licence


Photographs: Courtesy, Bandhan

In July 2012, the RBI said that Andhra Pradesh Act has no jurisdiction over microfinance institutions registered as non-banking financial companies (NBFC) but only on non-NBFC MFIs.

Subsequently, the Micro Financial Sector Development and Regulation Bill, 2011, was cleared and micro-lenders were brought under the ambit of the central bank.

Bandhan has loan schemes such as Samriddhi for the MSME sector and Sushiksha for education, among others. It also runs the Bandhan School of Development Management. 

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