Banks against deregulation of savings rate

Banks against deregulation of savings rate

Banks have written to the RBI stating they are not in favour of a deregulated savings rates regime and such a move would "hurt everybody" in the system.

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PTI
  • Jul 13, 2011,
  • Updated Jul 13, 2011 8:11 PM IST
Banks have written to the RBI stating they are not in favour of a deregulated savings rates regime and such a move would "hurt everybody" in the system."It is the view of our members that it is not an appropriate time to deregulate the savings rate because of the upward bias in the interest rates currently and the general high rate scenario," Indian Banks Association (IBA) Chief Executive K Ramakrishnan said. The Reserve Bank's recent moves to calculate interest rate on a daily basis and increase the interest rate on savings accounts to 4 per cent is already hurting the banks, he said, adding that the IBA recently wrote to the RBI about its reservations on the subject.Deregulation of the savings rate will "hurt everybody", Ramakrishnan said, stressing that a possibility of the rate going down from the present 4 per cent cannot be ruled out if deregulation were to happen.The savings bank rate is the only regulated rate presently and a source of low cost funds for banks. It is feared that a competition within lenders to grab the low-cost deposits will result in the rates going up.In what is seen as preparing the ground for a deregulated savings rate regime, the RBI had increased the interest rate to 4 per cent in May this year. The RBI has also put a paper for discussion on the issue in April.Meanwhile, Ramakrishnan said that if the deregulation were to happen, it should be in "totality" and not restricted to the rates alone."We should be allowed to charge for the transactions which are free presently. Let the market decide that as well.Nowhere else do we have facilities like ATMs, cheque books, fund transfers which come free," he said

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Banks have written to the RBI stating they are not in favour of a deregulated savings rates regime and such a move would "hurt everybody" in the system."It is the view of our members that it is not an appropriate time to deregulate the savings rate because of the upward bias in the interest rates currently and the general high rate scenario," Indian Banks Association (IBA) Chief Executive K Ramakrishnan said. The Reserve Bank's recent moves to calculate interest rate on a daily basis and increase the interest rate on savings accounts to 4 per cent is already hurting the banks, he said, adding that the IBA recently wrote to the RBI about its reservations on the subject.Deregulation of the savings rate will "hurt everybody", Ramakrishnan said, stressing that a possibility of the rate going down from the present 4 per cent cannot be ruled out if deregulation were to happen.The savings bank rate is the only regulated rate presently and a source of low cost funds for banks. It is feared that a competition within lenders to grab the low-cost deposits will result in the rates going up.In what is seen as preparing the ground for a deregulated savings rate regime, the RBI had increased the interest rate to 4 per cent in May this year. The RBI has also put a paper for discussion on the issue in April.Meanwhile, Ramakrishnan said that if the deregulation were to happen, it should be in "totality" and not restricted to the rates alone."We should be allowed to charge for the transactions which are free presently. Let the market decide that as well.Nowhere else do we have facilities like ATMs, cheque books, fund transfers which come free," he said

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Union Budget 2026 | Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman presented her record 9th Union Budget on February 1. The Budget has brought relief for travellers, students, exporters and clean-energy sectors, while tightening the screws on tax non-compliance and speculative trading.
Track live Budget updates, breaking news, expert opinions and in-depth analysis only on BusinessToday.in
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