Regional Rural Bank
Regional Rural Banks (RRBs) are government owned scheduled commercial banks of India that operate at regional level in different states of India. These banks are under the ownership of Ministry of Finance, Government of India, Sponsered Bank and concerned State Government in the ratio of 50:35:15 respectively. They were created to serve rural areas with basic banking and financial services. However, RRBs also have urban branches.
Type | Government owned Banks |
---|---|
Industry | Banking, financial services |
Founded | 2 October 1975 |
Number of locations | 21871 |
Products | Retail banking, corporate banking, investment banking, mortgage loans, wealth management, debit cards, UPI, internet banking, mobile banking, finance and insurance |
Owner | Government of India (50%), Nationalised Banks (35%), State Governments (15%) |
Parent | Ministry of Finance, Government of India |
The area of operation is limited to the area notified by the government of India covering, and it covers one or more districts in the State. RRBs perform various functions such as providing banking facilities to rural and semi-urban areas, carrying out government operations like disbursement of wages of MGNREGA workers and distribution of pensions, providing para-banking facilities like locker facilities, debit and credit cards, mobile banking, internet banking, and UPI services.[1]
History
Regional Rural Banks were established under the provisions of an ordinance passed on 26 September 1975 and the RRB Act 1976 to provide sufficient banking and credit facility for agriculture and other rural sectors. As a result, five RRBs were set up on 2 October 1975 on the recommendations of the Narsimhan Committee on Rural Credit, during the tenure of Indira Gandhi's government. The purpose was to include rural areas into the economic mainstream since around 70% of the Indian population was rural.
Prathama Bank, with head office in Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh was the first RRB. It was sponsored by Syndicate Bank and had an authorised capital of Rs. 5 crore.[2] The other four RRBs were Gaur Gramin Bank (sponsored by UCO Bank), Gorakhpur Kshetriya Gramin Bank (sponsored by State Bank of India), Haryana Kshetriya Gramin Bank (sponsored by Punjab National Bank), and Jaipur-Nagaur Anchalik Gramin Bank (sponsored by UCO Bank).
The RRBs were owned by the central government, state government, and the sponsoring bank with 50%, 15%, and 35% shareholding respectively.[3]
Recapitalization
A review of the RRBs in August 2009 by the Union Finance Minister revealed that a large number of RRBs had a low Capital to Risk weighted Assets Ratio (CRAR). A committee was constituted in September 2009 under the chairmanship of K C Chakrabarty,[4] the deputy governor of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to analyse the financials of the RRBs and suggest measures, including re-capitalisation to bring the CRAR of RRBs to at least 9% in a sustainable manner by 2012. The committee submitted its report in May 2010.[5][6]
The committee recommended RRBs to have a CRAR of at least 7% on 31 March 2011 and at least 9% from 31 March 2012 onwards. The recapitalization requirement of Rs 2,200.00 crore for 40 of the 82 RRBs were to be released in two installments in 2010–11 and 2011–12. The remaining 42 RRBs will not require any capital and will be able to maintain CRAR of at least 9% as of 31 March 2012 and thereafter, on their own. A fund of ₹100 crore to be set up for training and capacity building of the RRB staff.[5]
The Government of India approved the recapitalization of the RRBs to improve their CRAR in the following manner:
- Share of central government, that is, ₹1,100 crore will be released as per provisions made by the Department of Expenditure in 2010-11 and 2011–12. However, release of the funds will be contingent on proportionate release of the state government and sponsor bank share.[5]
- A capacity building fund with a corpus of ₹100 crore to be set up by central government with NABARD for training and capacity building of the RRB staff in the institution of NABARD and other reputed institutions. The functioning of the fund will be periodically reviewed by the central government. An action plan will be prepared by NABARD and sent to the government for approval.[5]
- An additional amount of ₹700 crore was set up as a contingency fund to meet the requirement of the weak RRBs, particularly those in the north-eastern and the eastern region.[5]
Organizational structure
The organizational structure for RRB's varies from branch to branch and depends upon the nature and size of business done by the branch. The head office of an RRB normally had three to nine departments. The following is the decision making hierarchy of officials in a RRB.
- Board of Directors
- Chairman & Managing Director
- General Manager
- Assistant General Manager
- Regional Manager/Chief Manager
- Senior Manager
- Manager
- Officer
- Office Assistant
- Office Attendant
Legal significance
RRBs are recognized by the law and they have legal significance. The Regional Rural Banks Act, 1976 Act No. 21 Of 1976 [9 February 1976.] reads:[10]
For the incorporation, regulation and winding up of Regional Rural Banks with a view to developing the rural economy by providing, for the purpose of development of agriculture, trade, commerce, industry and other productive activities in the rural areas, credit and other facilities, particularly to the small and marginal farmers, agricultural laborers, artisans and small entrepreneurs, and for matters connected therewith and incidental thereto.
List of Regional Rural banks
There are 43 RRBs since 1 April 2020.[11]
Andhra Pradesh
- Andhra Pragathi Grameena Bank[12]
- Chaitanya Godavari Gramin Bank
- Saptagiri Gramin Bank
Arunachal Pradesh
- Arunachal Pradesh Rural Bank
Assam
Bihar
Chhattisgarh
- Chhattisgarh Rajya Gramin Bank
Gujarat
- Baroda Gujarat Gramin Bank
- Saurashtra Gramin Bank
Haryana
- Sarva Haryana Gramin Bank
Himachal Pradesh
- Himachal Pradesh Gramin Bank
Jammu and Kashmir
- J&K Grameen Bank
- Ellaquai Dehati Bank
Jharkhand
Karnataka
- Karnataka Gramin Bank
- Karnataka Vikas Grameena Bank
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
- Madhyanchal Gramin Bank
- Madhya Pradesh Gramin Bank
Maharashtra
- Maharashtra Gramin Bank
- Vidharbha Konkan Gramin Bank
Manipur
- Manipur Rural Bank
Meghalaya
- Meghalaya Rural Bank
Mizoram
Nagaland
- Nagaland Rural Bank
Odisha
Puducherry
Punjab
- Punjab Gramin Bank
Rajasthan
- Baroda Rajasthan Kshetriya Gramin Bank
- Rajasthan Marudhara Gramin Bank
Tamil Nadu
Telangana
- Andhra Pradesh Grameena Vikas Bank
- Telangana Grameena Bank
Tripura
Uttar Pradesh
- Aryavart Bank
- Prathama UP Gramin Bank
- Baroda UP Bank[13]
Uttarakhand
West Bengal
- Paschim Banga Gramin Bank
- Bangiya Gramin Vikash Bank
- Uttarbanga Kshetriya Gramin Bank
References
- "Govt provides Rs 670-cr support to Regional Rural Banks to meet regulatory capital". The Financial Express. 1 November 2020. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
- Bhattacharjee, Subhomoy (7 September 2019). "The largest rewrite of the banking history and merger's cultural traps". Business Standard India. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
- RRBs
- "Reserve Bank intrigues: Was KC Chakrabarty set up?". Moneylife NEWS & VIEWS. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
- Recapitalization of Regional Rural Banks (RRBs) to improve their Capital to Risk Weighted Assets Ratio (CRAR)
- Jog, Sanjay (4 April 2011). "Regional Rural banks revamp in line with Chakrabarty report". Business Standard India. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
- "Amalgamation of RRBs: 25 merged into 10 in nine months - Indian Express". archive.indianexpress.com. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
- "Reserve Bank of India - Reports". www.rbi.org.in. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
- "Mega boost to Regional Rural Banks: Govt to infuse ₹670 crore". mint. 1 November 2020. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
- The Regional Rural Banks Act, 1976
- "list of SCB".
- Kumar, N. Ravi (9 May 2019). "Rural banks to be merged in TS, AP". The Hindu.
- "दैनिक जागरण: बैंकों का विलय : एक हुए UP के तीन बैंक, अब बड़ौदा यूपी बैंक नाम से जाने जाएंगे".