Having opened over one lakh savings accounts
within a fortnight of launch of its pilot services in Rajasthan, Airtel
Payments Bank is gearing up to extend the services to southern states starting
this week.
“We are getting into South India within a week... a couple of
states like Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Karnataka,” Airtel Payments Bank CEO
Shashi Arora told this agencies.
Airtel Payments Bank is the first payments bank in India to go
live.
Arora said these states have a deep rural market where the
opportunity to offer banking benefit to financially excluded and the unbanked
population is large. “We would be rolling out with about 20,000 retail outlets
in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana combined, and another 15,000 or so, in
Karanataka,” he said.
These retail outlets will act as banking access points and offer
banking services, including eKYC-led onborading, cash deposits, cash
withdrawals, he added.
Arora added that it is a “matter of just a few weeks” before
Airtel Payments Bank launches services across India. “The fact that we have
presence in telecom circles across India, gives the payment bank the ability to
scale up significantly in a short span of time,” he said.
Meanwhile, in a statement, Airtel Payments Bank said it has
opened over 100,000 savings accounts within a fortnight of rollout of its pilot
services in Rajasthan.
Close to 70 per cent of these accounts opened are in rural
areas, highlighting the massive scope for serving customers in unbanked and
underbanked pockets, the statement added.
In Rajasthan, Airtel Payments Bank is rolling out pilot services
across 10,000 Airtel retail outlets, which also act as banking points.
Airtel Payments Bank plans to have a network of 100,000
merchants (shops) across Rajasthan by the end of the year. All these merchants
will accept digital payments via Airtel Payments Bank using a mobile phone.
With the objective of deepening financial inclusion, RBI kicked
off an era of differentiated banking with SFB (small finance bank) and PB
(payments bank), and 21 entities, including 11 for payments bank, were given
in-principle nod last year.
Later, three entities — Tech Mahindra, Cholamandalam Investment
and Finance Company and a consortium of Dilip Shanghvi, IDFC Bank and Telenor
Financial Services — backed out of the payments bank licensing.
Payments banks can accept deposits and savings bank deposits from
individuals and small businesses, up to a maximum of Rs. 1 lakh per
account.
Agencies
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