Radio frequency identification service by Bharti, SBI allows cashless buying. |
It is a mobile phone with a difference. It comes with a card embedded with a radio frequency identification technology by which banks can store an array of data: saving accounts, loans taken and repayment schedules. And, of course, all the details now put on a piece of paper called the Kisan credit card. |
Bharti Airtel has tied up with the State Bank of India for a pilot project that could dramatically transform the face of rural banking. Launched a few months ago by creating bank accounts with data on a radio frequency identification card instead of in a pass book, the project hopes to superannuate the Kisan credit card. |
Being tried in nine villages in Pithoragarh (Uttaranchal), Medak (Andhra Pradesh) and Mizoram, its proponents say commercial launch could be just a year away. |
Banks issue Kisan credit cards to farmers who can take cheap loans and repay them flexibily depending on their crop pattern. However, at the moment, the card is a piece of paper. |
Now all this data can be loaded on a mobile phone card and the radio frequency identification technology allows this data to be retrieved remotely. |
The farmer can, thus, walk into a fertiliser shop in his village and buy on credit. The fertiliser shop needs a near-field communication phone--say, a Nokia 3230 with special features created on a technology platform developed jointly by Phillips and Sony--which doubles up as card swipe machine once the seller's phone is within 20 centimetres reach. The transaction debits the buyer's account and sends the data to the bank. |
"The transaction is cashless and, like the credit cards we use, banks can charge a merchant transaction service fees. Plus the bank gets real-time data and can keep tabs on what the farmer is using the loan for. Simply, the bank has complete control over the loan," says an Bharti Airtel executive. |
A State Bank of India executive said he could comment on the project only next month. |
For Bharti Airtel this is an effective way of adding new mobile subscribers in villages. Bharti Airtel also sees this model working in micro-credit. |