Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) is a wholly owned subsidiary of Reserve Bank of India.It was established on 15 July 1978 under the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation Act, 1961 for the purpose of providing insurance of deposits and guaranteeing of credit facilities. DICGC full Form is Deposit Insurance Credit Guarantee Corporation. It was established in the year 1978 July 15 under DICGC act 1961. It is a wholly owned subsidiary of Reserve Bank of India. Main aim of DICGC is to provide financial stability to the banking system by deposit insurance, special for the benefit of small depositors. Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) increases the insurance coverage for depositors in all insured banks to Rs.5 lakhs Updated account details of DICGC for Premium Payment by banks, Repayments by Liquidators etc. Alert on Fictitious Emails.
Published on Sep 03, 2020
Abstract
The concept of insuring deposits kept with banks received attention for the first time in the year 1948 after the banking crisis in Bengal . The issue came up for reconsideration in the year 1949, but was held in abeyance till the Reserve Bank ensured adequate arrangements for inspection of banks.
Subsequently, in the year 1950, the Rural Banking Enquiry Committee supported the concept. Serious thought to insuring deposits was, however, given by the Reserve Bank and the Central Government after the crash of the Palai Central Bank Ltd., and the Laxmi Bank Ltd. in 1960. The Deposit Insurance Corporation (DIC) Bill was introduced in Parliament on August 21, 1961 . After it was passed by Parliament, the Bill got the assent of the President on December 7, 1961 and the Deposit Insurance Act, 1961 came into force on January 1, 1962 . Deposit Insurance Scheme was initially extended to functioning commercial banks only. This included the State Bank of India and its subsidiaries, other commercial banks and the branches of the foreign banks operating in India .
With the enactment of the Deposit Insurance Corporation (Amendment) Act, 1968, the Corporation was required to register 'eligible cooperative banks' as insured banks under the provisions of Section 13 A of the DICGC Act. The Government of India, in consultation with the Reserve Bank, introduced a credit guarantee scheme in July 1960. The Reserve Bank was entrusted with the administration of the scheme, as an agent of the Central Government, under Section 17 (11 A)(a) of the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 and was designated as the Credit Guarantee Organization (CGO) for guaranteeing the advances granted by banks and other credit institutions to small scale industries. The Reserve Bank operated the scheme up to March 31, 1981 . The Reserve Bank also promoted a public limited company on January 14, 1971 , named the Credit Guarantee Corporation of India Ltd. (CGCI).
The credit guarantee schemes introduced by the Credit Guarantee Corporation of India Ltd., aimed at encouraging the commercial banks to cater to the credit needs of the hitherto neglected sectors, particularly the weaker sections of the society engaged in non-industrial activities, by providing guarantee cover to the loans and advances granted by the credit institutions to small and needy borrowers covered under the priority sector as defined by the RBI. With a view to integrating the functions of deposit insurance and credit guarantee, the above two organizations (DIC & CGCI) were merged and the present Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) came into existence on July 15, 1978. Consequently, the title of Deposit Insurance Act, 1961 was changed to 'The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation Act, 1961'. Effective from April 1, 1981 , the Corporation extended its guarantee support to credit granted to small scale industries also, after the cancellation of the Government of India's credit guarantee scheme. With effect from April 1, 1989 , guarantee cover was extended to the entire priority sector advances.
Objective of the Project
The objective of the project can be summarized as follows-
• i. To understand the role of Urban co-operative bank
• ii. To understand the basic concept of deposit insurance in bank and related issues
A Descriptive Research has been carried out wherein data has been extensively gathered from various Sources pertaining to Deposit insurance. The data was gathered by secondary sources mention below.
Secondary data has been collected from RBI's website for information on Indian Banking Industry particularly cooperative banks. DICGC website was also source of secondary data for method of premium calculation & claim Settlement.Secondary data has been collected by visiting the ledgers of the bank, Statutory Audit report of the Bank for the Year 2007 & 2008
Type Of Deposits Covered
The Corporation insures all bank deposits, such as savings, fixed, current, recurring, etc. except the deposits of (i) foreign governments; (ii) Central/State Governments; (iii)State Land Development Banks with the State co-operative banks; as also (iv) inter-bank deposits (v) deposits received outside India and (vi) deposit specifically exempted by the Corporation with the previous approval of the Reserve Bank.
INSURANCE PREMIUM
The Corporation collects insurance premium from insured banks for administration of the deposit insurance system. The premium to be paid by the insured banks is computed on the basis of their assessable deposits. Insured banks pay advance insurance premium to the Corporation annually, within two months from the beginning of each financial year based on its deposits as at the end of previous half year. The premium paid by the insured banks to the Corporation is required to be borne by the banks themselves and is not passed on to the depositors.
For delay in payment of premium, an insured bank is liable to pay interest at the rate of 8 per cent above the Bank Rate on the default amount from the beginning of the relevant half-year till the date of payment.
Settlement of Claims
1. The Reserve Bank cancels the licence / rejects the application for licence of a bank and recommends its liquidation to the concerned
Registrar of Co-operative Societies (RCS) with endorsement to the DICGC
2. The RCS appoints a Liquidator for the liquidated bank with endorsement to the DICGC.
Dicgc India
3. The DICGC cancels the registration of the bank as an insured bank and issues guidelines for submission of the claim list by the liquidator within 3 months and requests Reserve Bank to appoint an external auditor [Chartered Accountant, (C.A)] for on-site verification of the list.
4. The Reserve Bank appoints C.A. and the DICGC conducts briefing and orientation session for C.A. to check the claim list.
5. The Liquidator submits the claim list for payment to the depositors (both hard and soft forms).
6. The external auditors ( C.A. ) submit their report on the aspects of the claim list.
Dicgc Act In Marathi
7. The claim list is computer-processed and payment list is generated.
8. Consolidated payment is released to the Liquidator and further information sought on incomplete/doubtful claims. The release of claims is announced through the website of the Corporation.
9. The liquidator releases the payment to the depositors.
Reference :
Source: Annual report of DICGC 2008-09
www.rbi.org.in
www.digc.org.in
www.bankrate.com
निक्षेप बीमा और प्रत्यय गारंटी निगम | |
Credit and Insurance Institution overview | |
---|---|
Formed | 1978; 43 years ago |
Headquarters | Mumbai, India |
Credit and Insurance Institution executive | |
Key document |
|
Website | www.dicgc.org.in |
Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) is a wholly owned subsidiary of Reserve Bank of India. It was established on 15 July 1978 under the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation Act, 1961 for the purpose of providing insurance of deposits and guaranteeing of credit facilities.
DICGC insures all bank deposits, such as saving, fixed, current, recurring deposit for up to the limit of Rs. 500,000 of each deposits in a bank.[1]
Framework[edit]
The functions of the subsidiary are governed by the provisions of 'The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation Act, 1961' (DICGC Act) and 'The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation General Regulations, 1961' framed by the Reserve Bank of India in exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (3) of Section 50 of the Act.[2]
A maximum of ₹5,00,000 (after the budget of 2020-21) is insured for each user for both principal and interest amount.If the customer has accounts in different branches of the same bank, all of those accounts are insured to a maximum of ₹5,00,000 each.
However, if there are more accounts in same bank, all of those are treated as a single account.The insurance premium is paid by the insured banks itself. This means that the benefit of deposit insurance protection is made available to the depositors or customers of banks free of cost.
The Corporation has the power to cancel the registration of an insured bank if it fails to pay the premium for three consecutive half-year periods.The Corporation may restore the registration of the bank if the bank makes a request and pays all the amounts due by way of premium from the date of default together with interest.
Reforms[edit]
The Financial Sector Legislative Reforms Commission (FSLRC) was set up by the Government of India, Ministry of Finance, on 24 March 2011, to review and rewrite the legal-institutional architecture of the Indian financial sector. In its report the FSLRC recommended a regulatory structure consisting of seven agencies including a deposit insurance-cum regulatory agency (which was named as Resolution Corporation). The present DICGC will be subsumed into the Resolution Corporation (RC) which will work across the financial system.
Drawing on the best international practice, the FSLRC proposal involved a unified resolution corporation that will deal with an array of financial firms such as banks and insurance companies; it will not just be a bank deposit insurance corporation. It will concern itself with all financial firms which make highly intense promises to consumers, such as banks, insurance companies, defined benefit pension funds, and payment systems.
It will also take responsibility for the graceful resolution of systemically important financial firms, even if they have no direct links to consumers.[citation needed]
The Government of India introduced the Financial Resolution and Deposit Insurance bill, 2017 (FRDI bill) in Lok Sabha in the Monsoon session of 2017 to bring forth these reforms.[3] There have been many concerns with regards to the new bill such as:
- Presently the banks have to pay a sum to the DICGC as insurance premium which insures all kinds of bank deposits up to a limit of ₹5,00,000. In case a stressed bank had to be liquidated, the depositors would be paid through DICGC. Though the bill proposes the banks to pay a sum to the Resolution Corporation, it neither specifies the insured amount nor the amount a depositor would be paid. It is thus unclear how much a depositor would be paid in case of liquidation.
- The bail in clause which largely worked against the interests of the depositors (as in Cyprus).[4][clarification needed]
References[edit]
- ^'Srikrishna panel insists on single unified regulator in financial sector'. Business Standard. 21 March 2013. Retrieved 23 November 2013.
- ^'About Us - Profile'. ..Dicgc. Archived from the original on 24 March 2013. Retrieved 23 November 2013.
- ^'PRS - Bill Track - The Financial Resolution and Deposit Insurance Bill, 2017'. www.prsindia.org. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
- ^'The FRDI Bill and concerns of the depositor'. The Hindu. 29 November 2017.