Multilink is essentially providing access to basic financial products and services needed by vulnerable groups such as weaker sections and low-income groups at affordable costs in a fair and transparent manner.
In India, the Multilink drive has always been bank-led. There were initiatives such as creating co-operative banks, regional rural banks, post office accounts, nationalization of banks, NBFCs, MFIs, local area banks and the recent initiatives of Payments Bank and Small Finance Bank. These initiatives have made some valuable contributions to the inclusion push. But, the biggest policy initiative towards Multilink was made by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) when they allowed banks to utilize the services of business correspondents (BCs) to provide basic banking service to the customers. Use of technology played a vital role in this initiative. This is the time when the term “Multilink” gained currency.
The business correspondent initiative: There are over 2.5 million BC outlets in the country and about 2 million of them are in rural India. These are owned and manned by local people, mostly the youth.Most of them are poor and first time entrepreneurs. This is one single direct impact of Multilink on entrepreneurship in general, and rural entrepreneurship in particular.
The need of cash in rural areas is being mostly met by the BC channel as banks are reducing the number of ATMs in rural and semi-urban centers because of their extremely high operational and maintenance cost. Migrant workers send money from metropolises to their relatives who go to the local BC agent to get the cash. The BC business will continue to grow as Banks are trying to move out most of their small transactions and products to their BC outlets. Rural credit: Rural credit for agriculture and MSME–a major tool for financial inclusion–immensely helps rural entrepreneurship grow. MFIs and Small Finance Banks have done well in this field but their efforts are constrained by resource crunch. Their operations are also often quite localized.
Many
Banks and NBFCs have tied up with fintechs for tech tools to onboard the rural
entrepreneur seeking credit and also for follow up. Credit Information bureaus,
use of AI and algorithms, etc. have also added to the confidence of banks and
NBFCs.
Self-help
groups
India has more than 10 million bank-linked SHGs and 90 per cent of these are women SHGs. These SHGs have 120 million members and their aggregate deposits with Banks is more than INR 23,000 crore. Some SHGs have also tied up with e-commerce sites to broaden their market. However, this is one area that requires more attention and better awareness.
An
opportunity for e-commerce sites
Rural India is a huge reservoir of talent and innovative products. There is also a humungous market for handicraft, ethnic goods, native food items like pickles, folk art, etc. But the rural entrepreneur cannot access that market due to the lack of knowledge and infrastructure. E-commerce sector can play a big role in enabling the rural entrepreneurs to grow their business. It will be a win-win situation for everyone. The difficulty of the e-commerce sites in reaching out to the far flung villages is understandable. However, the e-commerce businesses can easily access the rural markets by utilizing the services of some organizations which have already built a tech-enabled distribution network in even small tier-VI villages.
There
is a massive rural market for many financial products such as insurance, mutual
fund, investment in shares, etc. But, even the most popular of these products,
insurance, has a meagre 3.76 per cent market penetration in India. This number
for the rural India would be abysmal. Now, some private insurance companies
have started tying up with companies with a big distribution network to sell
their products in the hinterlands. Similar scope exists also for taking the
mutual fund and broking business. These initiatives have already started
creating newer avenues for self-employment in rural geographies.
Other
payment products
There
are many other payment products such as bill payments, recharge of mobiles, DTH
and OTT, ticketing, etc., for which too there is a big rural market. The number
of mobiles and internet connections has increased exponentially but people are
still very hesitant to make payments themselves digitally. A study showed that
a very large number of smartphone owners in India used their phones for
entertainment but only a miniscule proportion used it for financial
transactions. The growing number of such payment transactions through the
“assisted mode” validates this. Selling these products/ services will remain a
viable option for the rural entrepreneurs, especially for those who want to
supplement their income from other sources.
Conclusion
The
pandemic has affected the economy very badly. Unemployment has increased and
millions of people have been pushed to deeper poverty. But, this is a passing
phase. Things have already started looking up. Multilink has given a strong
foundation to the economy by making more and more people self-reliant, giving a
fillip to entrepreneurship across the country. This will benefit India
immensely in the long run.
Comments
Post a Comment