A comparison of the charges levied and
interest rates offered by India Post Payments Bank and Airtel Payments Bank for
rendering different services
Finance minister Arun Jaitley (right) being welcomed during the launch of pilot branches of India Post Payments in New Delhi on Monday. Photo: PTI |
New Delhi: India Post Payments Bank (IPPB)
launched on Monday by the Union finance minister Arun Jaitley is the second
payments bank to commence its operation in the country after Airtel Payments
Bank (APB), which was launched on January 12.
IPPB has been set up as a 100% Indian
government-owned public limited company under the department of posts with the
aim to open around 650 new branches in postal district headquarters.
Currently, the department of posts has an
existing network of around 1,55,000 post offices. The new branches will be
co-located with the existing post offices.
On Monday, it launched services on a pilot
basis in Raipur and Ranchi.
APB, on the other hand, is a joint venture
between phone services provider Bharti Airtel Ltd and Kotak Mahindra Bank Ltd.
The payments bank went live with a network of 250,000 banking points. In the
pilot phase, the bank added over 1 million customers, according to a statement
by the company.
As mandated by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI),
the new model of banking focuses on providing basic financial services such as
all kinds of payments; including social security payments, utility bill
payments, remittance services, current and saving accounts up to a balance of
Rs1 lakh, distribution of insurance, mutual funds, pension products and acting
as business correspondent to other banks for credit products especially in rural
areas and among the underserved segments of the society.
However, there are distinct differences in the
business models of both the payments bank. Mint compares the charges levied and
interest rates offered by both the payments banks for rendering different
services, including deposits and withdrawals.
APB charges Rs5 to Rs25 for cash withdrawals
less than Rs4,000 and 0.65% of the withdrawal amount which is equal to or
greater than Rs4,000. IPPB does not charge anything for cash withdrawals from
its branches and ATMs. However, it charges Rs15-35 for rendering doorstep
banking (cash based) for both deposits and withdrawals up to Rs10, 000.
The remittance charges levied by both the banks
also differ. APB lists charges for transactions made through internet banking,
through the app and USSD (Unstructured Supplementary Service Data) or *99#
whereas IPPB also recognizes transactions through NEFT (National Electronic Funds Transfer),
IMPS (Immediate Payment Service), AEPS (Aadhaar enabled payments system)
and UPI (Unified Payments Interface).
Only transactions up to Rs10, 000 is permitted
through AEPS which is free. According to IPPB, banking charges at branch and
doorstep for each NEFT based transaction ranges from Rs2.5-5 and Rs5 is charged
for every transaction via IMPS.
APB charges 0.5% of the amount transferred
within its payments bank whereas 1% of the amount transferred is charged for
transfer of funds from APB to other bank accounts through banking points.
Customers of IPPB can withdraw amount up to
Rs10,000 from an ATM in a single transaction and up to Rs25,000 per day. APB, on
the other hand, has set Rs10 as the minimum cash withdrawal amount, there is no
clarity on the upper limit to cash withdrawals.
APB offers an high interest rate of 7.25% p.a.
on deposits on savings accounts which is higher than the interest rate offered
by traditional banks on fixed deposits.
IPPB’s interest rates have been fixed as 4.5%
if the quarterly average balance is up to Rs25,000, 5% if it is between Rs25,000
and Rs50,000, and 5.5% if above Rs50,000
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