Siasat
Daily: New Delhi: Tuesday, 10 March 2020.
Over
3,400 branches of 26 public sector banks (PSBs) have been either closed or
merged during the last five financial years due to merger under the
consolidation exercise in the banking space, revealed an RTI query.
Of
this, 75 per cent of the affected branches belong to the country’s biggest
lender State Bank of India (SBI).
To
a query under the Right to Information (RTI) Act filed by a Neemuch-based
activist Chandrashekhar Gaud, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) informed that 26
PSBs of the country either closed or merged 90 branches during FY 2014-15, 126
branches in 2015-16, 253 branches in 2016-17, 2,083 branches in 2017-18 and 875
branches during 2018-19.
According
to RTI reply, the maximum 2,568 branches of the SBI were affected due to merger
or closure in the last five financial years.
The
RBI informed that Bharatiya Mahila Bank, State Bank of Bikaner and Jaipur,
State Bank of Hyderabad, State Bank of Mysore, State Bank of Patiala and State
Bank of Travancore were merged with SBI with effect from April 1, 2017.
In
addition, the merger of Vijaya Bank and Dena Bank with Bank of Baroda came into
effect from April 1 this year.
Meanwhile,
employee organizations of public banks have opposed the government’s new plan
to consolidate the banking space.
All
India Bank Employees’ Association (AIBEA) General Secretary C H Venkatachalam
told PTI that at least 7,000 branches of these banks likely to be affected if
the government forms four big banks out of the ten state-owned banks in the
country.
Most
of these affected branches will be from the metros and cities, he added.
Venkatachalam
expressed apprehensions that the proposed merger would decline the business of
the PSBs concerned.
It
is generally seen that customers stop banking with the branch, once it was
closed or merged with another one.
However,
economist Jayantilal Bhandari said that the merger of PSBs is the need of the
hour.
“The
state exchequer will benefit after the creation of big banks by merging smaller
public sector banks.
In
addition, the large state-run banks will be able to distribute relatively more
loans to the common people due to their strong financial condition, which will
spur the economic growth in the country,” he said.