Bank Deposit Insurance: Central government is preparing to increase the deposit insurance limit, check details

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Bank Deposit Insurance: Department of Financial Services Secretary M. Nagaraju on Monday (17 February) said that the government is actively considering increasing the limit of deposit insurance from the current Rs 5 lakh.

At present, deposits up to Rs 5,00,000 are covered under the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) Deposit Insurance Scheme. A few days after the alleged scam of Maharashtra’s New India Co-operative Bank came to light, Nagaraju said that work is in progress on such a proposal.

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In a press conference attended by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, he said, “The issue is to increase the insurance limit… It is being actively considered. As soon as the government approves, we will issue a notification.” However, Nagaraju refused to comment on the crisis of New India Co-operative Bank. He said that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is looking into the matter.

Deposit insurance claims kick in when a lender goes under. Over the years, the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) has been paying such claims. The body collects a premium from banks for the cover it provides. Again, most claims have been made against co-operative lenders.

After the PMC Bank scam, the DICGC insurance limit was increased from Rs 1 lakh to Rs 5 lakh in 2020. According to PTI, Economic Affairs Secretary Ajay Seth said that the cooperative banking sector is running well under the supervision of the RBI. He termed the overall condition of the sector as strong.

He said that no one should doubt the entire sector because of the crisis in one bank. It is the regulator’s job to take action against the guilty units. According to reports, 90 percent of the 1.3 lakh depositors of New India Co-operative Bank will get the entire amount under DICGC.

The scam in the bank came to light after a physical inspection revealed that Rs 122 crore cash shown in the ledger was missing. The investigation revealed that the bank’s General Manager-Finance Hitesh Mehta had allegedly given a major portion of the embezzled amount to a local builder.

RBI data shows that in the financial year 2023-24, DICGC settled claims worth Rs 1,432 crore. The entire amount was for cooperative banks. The number of banks registered with DICGC was 1,997 as of March 31, 2024. These include 140 commercial banks and 1,857 cooperative banks.

The current limit of Rs 5,00,000 covers about 98 percent of deposit accounts. In the case of commercial banks, only 41.9 percent of deposits are covered under insurance. Whereas in the case of cooperative banks, this figure is up to 63.3 percent.

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