"While universal banking model remains the dominant and preferred model across the globe, there are countries, for example the US, Australia, Singapore, Hong Kong (China) and Indonesia that offer differentiated banking licence. We however, feel it would be bit early to introduce such a model in the domestic context," SBI Research said in a report.
Maintaining that time is not ripe for such a system, it said 40 per cent of India's population falls into the financially excluded category, and highlighted not so encouraging experiences with the local area and regional rural banks in this regard.
It would be very difficult for a differentiated bank to survive by selling only one or two products, it said.
Only the foreign lenders, which undertake niche business activities even though they have a universal banking licence, could be possibly interested in differentiated licencing, SBI Research said.
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Additionally, the differentiated licensing model can be tried for fee-based business areas like credit card, remittances, payment and settlement business, it said.
Early this month, RBI granted universal banking license to two applicants - Bandhan and IDFC -- and added that some of the nearly two dozen aspirants were more suited for differentiated banking licence.