The finance ministry has asked the public sector bank chiefs to submit details of their recruitment process to facilitate training and employment of minorities. |
Acting on the Prime Minister's New 15-Point Programme for the Welfare of Minorities, which aims to give special consideration to minorities in recruitment, the banking division has written a letter to the chief executives of banks and financial institutions (FIs) asking them to give "top-most priority" to it. |
The ministry has sought information on "" posts for which regular recruitment is made; expected parameters for the said posts; subjects for tests; and training modules to improve skills in the matter. |
Besides the training module prescribed for improving the skills of candidates, the division has sought the names of various examination centres for onward transmission to the Ministry of Minorities Affairs. |
This would help the Ministry of Minorities Affairs to have fruitful interaction with the NGOs, entrusted with such pre-test training. |
"In view of the significance attached to the implementation of the Prime Minister's New 15-Point Programme for the Welfare of Minorities, it is requested that the requisite information may please be furnished on top most priority," the letter read. |
This assumes importance as only recently the government had instructed banks to open more branches in the 103 minority-dominated districts and lend more money to them. |
Accordingly, the Reserve Bank has included minorities under the "weaker sections" category of the priority lending list. Both government-owned and private banks are mandated to lend 10 per cent of their total loans to weaker sections. |
The weaker sections under the priority sector, as defined by the RBI, include small and marginal farmers, landless labourers, tenant farmers, artisans, scheduled castes and scheduled tribes, self-help groups, among others. |