Less than a third of all bank deposits in value terms
in the country is insured by the RBI arm Deposit Insurance and Credit
Guarantee Corporation of India (DICGC).
The central bank is fine with
this, and points to the international benchmark of 20-30 %
Yes,
countries such as Canada, Korea, Russia, Singapore and Switzerland have
insurance only for 20-30 per cent of their bank deposits, according to a
March 2013 paper put out by the International Association of Deposit
Insurers (IADI).
But what is left unsaid is that the
deposit coverage limit in each of these countries is far higher than the
₹1 lakh cover available in India. While Brazil has a coverage limit of
around $79,300, Canada insures up to a maximum $75,000 and Switzerland
upwards of $100,000 per depositor. In contrast. the per person deposit
insurance cover in India works out to a measly $1,500.
Deposit
insurance in India covers all commercial banks, local area banks,
regional rural banks and co-operative banks. Each depositor is insured
up to ₹1 lakh for both principal and interest.
The
deposit insurance coverage limit is applied separately to deposits in
each bank. If a bank goes belly up, then the DICGC pays the insured
amount to the depositor.
While 92.3 % of the
168-odd crore accounts were covered in 2015-16, only 30 % of the
amount in these accounts was insured. The insurance cover, which was
about 35 % five years back and a much higher 60 per cent a decade
back, has been dropping in the last couple of years.
The
reason lies in the sharp jump in high-value deposits, given the growing
income levels in India. From about ₹40,000 in 2005-06, the average
amount in each deposit account has moved upwards of ₹60,000 in the last
three to four years. The coverage under DICGC was last raised in 1993
from ₹30,000 to ₹1 lakh. This was done after a long gap of 13 years. For
over two decades, the cover has remained at ₹1 lakh.
Well covered
When
compared with other countries globally, the deposit cover in India
falls badly short on two counts. One, of course, is the coverage limit,
which is only a fraction of that offered in most countries. Canada,
Brazil, Indonesia, Switzerland, France and the US — all insure an amount
upwards of $70,000 per depositor.
While
many of these countries only cover around 30 per cent of the total
deposits, the much higher per depositor limit offers some respite.
In
the US, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation offers an insurance
coverage of $250,000, a limit that was revised in 2009 from the earlier
$100,000.
Aside from the coverage limit, India also
ranks lower than the US, Japan, Indonesia, France and Australia, in
terms of coverage ratios. These countries cover 60-70 per cent of total
deposits in the system, according to the IADI paper.
Differential premium
While
it is true that the coverage should include as many individual
depositors as possible, a reasonable value of total deposits should be
left uncovered to avoid moral hazard, according to IADI. To avoid moral
hazard, the RBI is mooting a differential premium which can lay the
ground to increase the ₹1 lakh limit.
No comments:
Post a Comment