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Comparing Business Correspondent With Informal Saving Avenues
This Note focuses on comparing informal saving avenues with "Business Correspondent" (BC) services on a variety of attributes. The dimensions for comparison have been derived from respondents' perception of qualities that should characterise an ideal saving avenue. These...
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Lessons Learned from MicroSave’s Action Research Programme 2007-2009:...
This note discusses the lessons learned from MicroSave’s two years of working in the Indian microfinance market. It highlights some of the broad issues and how these have been addressed by MicroSave and its partners, as well as where additional documents are available. It essentially...
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The Answer is “Yes” - Cost and Willingness to Pay in India

Policy Briefs Author: Akhand Tiwari, Akhilesh Singh, Ann-Byrd Platt, Graham A. N. Wright, Minakshi Ramji and Sachin Bansal
Published: May 01, 2012

Abstract:

Estimates for the number of Indians without bank accounts vary from 400 million  to approximately 600 million if one factors in 8.6% population growth in 2010-2011, dormant accounts, and the greater focus on the unbanked rural poor, rather than urban migrants and other indigent city-dwellers.

Public-sector and retail banks in India now have both a greater obligation and more opportunities, welcome or unwelcome, to enable poor people manage their money better. One solution is to charge small fees, particularly for ""doorstep"" or local services in areas without easy access to branches. RBI has sanctioned ""reasonable service charges"" since 2009 to help defray the banks' costs of maintaining low-deposit accounts and to encourage business correspondents.

Until recently, the business case for Indian banks using business correspondents (BCs) to extend financial inclusion in rural areas has been an open question. MicroSave sought to resolve this question last year in a study in Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu and Uttar Pradesh. The needs of the customer, arguably the most important component in any business proposition, seem clear. More than two-thirds of the 748 respondents interviewed in 163 sessions claim they are indeed willing to pay for more convenient banking services closer to home and work.


Tags: Business correspondent, Banking correspondent, Graham AN Wright, MicroSave, Financial services, Financial inclusion, BC model, Willingness to pay, Branchless banking

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