Mumbai: Amid growing clamour from banks to charge customers for
transactions at ATMs to make them economically viable, RBI Deputy
Governor K C Chakrabarty said the regulator will have no objections if
the lenders charge "reasonable fee" for such services.
"If banks
charge a reasonable fee on ATM transactions then the RBI will have no
objections," Chakrabarty, in charge of banking services at RBI, told
reporters on the sidelines of an event.
The senior-most Deputy Governor said till now, no request has come from the banks to raise the fees for transacting at ATMs.
Ideally,
the issue of charging customers for ATM usage should be left to
competitive market forces and banks should be allowed the liberty to
decide their own offerings, the commercial banker-turned-central banker
said.
Following a brutal attack on a woman inside an ATM of
Corporation Bank in Bangalore in November last, banks have been asked to
ensure round-the-clock armed security at their cash dispensing kiosks.
This did not find favour with banks, who argued it would be
unfeasible to have 24-hour security at ATMs.
Reports said lenders are considering charging customers on a per transaction and shutting certain ATMs at odd hours.
At
present, a customer can use his/her bank's ATM as many times in a
month, while free transactions at cash outlets of other banks are capped
at five a month.
A bank pays Rs. 15 plus taxes for every transaction to the other bank even for the free transactions."If banks are going into losses they will have no choice but to raise charges," Chakrabarty said.
Banks
are learnt to be discussing the issue within the apex industry body
Indian Banks Association and will be coming out with a decision soon.
Meanwhile,
commenting on the recent Financial Stability Report's suggestion to
reduce the cap on single entity or group exposure caps, Chakrabarty
said, "not only RBI but all international regulators are looking into
risks of corporate exposure."
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