Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus said that micro-finance institutions
(MFIs) in India should be allowed to accept deposits from the public.
Nobel laureate Muhammad
Yunus said that micro-finance institutions (MFIs) in India should be
allowed to accept deposits from the public.
Speaking at the
'PanIIT Global eConclave', the social entrepreneur said that at present MFIs
have to go to the banks for money.
"My plea to
the Indian government is that MFIs should be allowed to accept deposits from
the public. Now, they go to the banks for money," Yunus, the founder of
Bangladesh-based Grameen Bank, said on Sunday evening.
He said that the Reserve
Bank of India (RBI) has allowed the opening of small finance banks who are
able to accept deposits.
Many MFIs such as
Ujjivan and Jana have converted into small finance banks after getting licenses
from the RBI.
"Finance is
the economic oxygen of people. The banking system is not keen to lend money to
the poor for which an alternative banking channel has to be developed for
them," he noted.
As MFIs are not
allowed to accept deposits, the cost of funds at the hands of the beneficiaries
become high because they borrow money from banks -- SIDBI and NABARD.
Raising concerns
that many MFIs may become "loan sharks", Yunus said the sector should
be defined as a "social business" and also pitched for zero
dividend-paying entities.
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