NEFT transfers to be quicker as RBI cuts settlement time by half

07 Apr 2017

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has decided to slash clearance time for National Electronic Funds Transfer (NEFT) by reducing the settlement time from one hour to half an hour, thereby increasing the number of settlements and enhancing the efficiency of the electronic payment system.

In line with the document on Vision-2018 for Payment and Settlement Systems, the NEFT settlement cycle will be reduced from hourly batches to half hourly batches

As envisaged in the document on Vision-2018 for Payment and Settlement Systems, the NEFT settlement cycle will be reduced from hourly batches to half hourly batches, the RBI stated in its settlement and development policy statement.

''Consequently, 11 additional settlement batches will be introduced at 8.30 am onwards, taking the total number of half hourly settlement batches during the day to 23. This will enhance the efficiency of the NEFT system and add to customer convenience.

''The starting batch at 8.00 am and closing batch at 7.00 pm shall remain the same, as hitherto. The return discipline shall also remain the same, ie, B+2 hours (settlement batch time plus two hours) as per the existing practice,'' it added

The RBI, meanwhile, is initiating a pilot project on financial literacy at the block level to explore innovative and participatory approaches to financial literacy.

The pilot project will be commissioned in nine states across 80 blocks by non-government organisations (NGOs) in collaboration with sponsor banks, it said.

Six NGOs registered with the Depositor Education and Awareness Fund, viz, CRISIL Foundation, Mumbai; Dhan Foundation; Swadhaar Fin Access, Mumbai; Indian School of Micro Finance for Women (ISMW); Samarpit, Chhattisgarh and the PACE Foundation have been selected to execute the pilot project in collaboration with banks, it said.

The pilot project will be executed with the following broad objectives - active saving and good borrowing; financial planning and goal setting and going digital and consumer protection.

The Centres for Financial Literacy (CFL) will be set up under a common name and logo, Money-wise Centre for Financial Literacy.

"The sponsor banks will enter into contracts with the identified NGOs within three months, that is, by June 30, 2017. Thereafter, the NGOs will start operating the CFLs within three months of entering into contracts with banks," it said.

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