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Article
25 Apr 2026
Why in News?
- The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has cancelled the banking licence of Paytm Payments Bank Limited (PPBL) with immediate effect, more than two years after initially restricting it from accepting new deposits.
- The RBI will approach the High Court to wind up the bank's operations, ensuring depositor interests are protected through a structured process.
- This case has become a landmark instance of regulatory enforcement in India's fintech and digital payments sector.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- What Are Payments Banks?
- Timeline of Regulatory Scrutiny
- Legal Basis for Cancellation
- Impact
- Challenges
- Way Forward
- Conclusion
What Are Payments Banks?
- Payments banks are a unique category of banks introduced by the RBI to promote financial inclusion.
- They operate under tight restrictions, for instance,
- Can accept deposits only up to ₹2 lakh per customer.
- Cannot offer loans or credit cards.
- Primarily serve as platforms for remittances, utility payments, and digital transactions.
- PPBL was founded by One97 Communications (49% stake) and Vijay Shekhar Sharma (51% stake), operating within the larger Paytm ecosystem.
Timeline of Regulatory Scrutiny:
- The beginning of oversight (2018):
- The RBI conducted an audit of PPBL's customer onboarding processes and found critical gaps in KYC (Know Your Customer) compliance. For example,
- A single PAN (Permanent Account Number) linked to multiple customer accounts — a red flag for regulatory bypass.
- Transactions allowed beyond prescribed account limits, raising money laundering concerns.
- Inconsistent customer identity verification during acquisition.
- PPBL was directed to halt onboarding of new customers until systems were strengthened.
- The RBI conducted an audit of PPBL's customer onboarding processes and found critical gaps in KYC (Know Your Customer) compliance. For example,
- New customer ban (2022): The bank was formally directed to stop onboarding new customers from March 11, 2022.
- Financial penalty (2023): The RBI imposed a monetary penalty of ₹5.39 crore for non-compliance with regulatory guidelines.
- Business restrictions (2024): The RBI barred PPBL from accepting deposits, credits, or top-ups in customer accounts, prepaid instruments and wallets, and FASTags and NCMC (National Common Mobility Cards), citing "persistent non-compliances and material supervisory concerns."
- Licence cancelled (2025): The RBI cancelled PPBL's banking licence, invoking provisions of the Banking Regulation (BR) Act, 1949.
Legal Basis for Cancellation:
- The RBI cited the following provisions of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 -
- Section 22(3)(c): Management character must not be prejudicial to depositors or public interest.
- Section 22(3)(e): No public interest served by allowing the bank to continue.
- Section 22(3)(g): Failure to comply with conditions of the Payments Bank licence.
- Section 5(b) and Section 6: Prohibited from conducting banking business with immediate effect.
- Key compliance violations: Failure to maintain a "Chinese wall" (operational separation) between PPBL and its group entity, One97 Communications — a critical governance requirement to prevent conflict of interest.
Impact:
- On One97 Communications and the Paytm ecosystem: The regulatory crackdown had cascading consequences -
- Stock fell 40–50%, reflecting investor panic.
- Wallet services, merchant settlements, FASTag, and autopay services were disrupted.
- Paytm was forced to forge emergency partnerships with Axis Bank and Yes Bank for continuity.
- User and merchant migration to rivals like Google Pay and PhonePe.
- Increased compliance costs and operational restructuring.
- Long-term shift towards a leaner, partner-bank-driven business model.
- Broader significance for India:
- Consumer protection: RBI action demonstrates zero tolerance toward practices harming depositors.
- Strengthening digital finance: India’s digital payments revolution must rest on strong compliance architecture.
- Fintech regulation: Innovation cannot bypass prudential norms.
- Institutional credibility: Shows RBI’s willingness to act against even large, popular market players.
Challenges:
- Regulatory arbitrage risk in the fintech space, where rapid growth often outpaces compliance infrastructure.
- Difficulty in maintaining KYC standards at scale for digital-first banks.
- The tension between financial innovation and depositor protection.
- Risks of group entity entanglement in banking operations, undermining independence.
- Systemic disruption to millions of users dependent on integrated payment ecosystems.
Way Forward:
- This episode reinforces the need for robust compliance frameworks in payments banks before scaling operations.
- It highlights broad supervisory and enforcement powers of the RBI under the BR Act.
- Fintech companies must institutionalise independent compliance functions and maintain strict separation from parent entities.
- Policymakers may re-examine the regulatory framework for payments banks, balancing inclusion goals with governance standards.
Conclusion:
- The cancellation of licence underscores that digital innovation cannot substitute regulatory discipline.
- While fintech firms are central to India’s inclusive growth and cashless economy goals, public trust depends on transparency, governance, and depositor protection.
- The episode reinforces the principle that in banking, compliance is as important as innovation.
Article
25 Apr 2026
Why in News?
- When the Union Budget 2026-27 was presented, a widely held belief was that India had entered a “Goldilocks period” — a phase where economic conditions are ideal — steady growth, low inflation, and low unemployment.
- This phrase, used by the RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra, suggested that the Indian economy was well-balanced and resilient.
- However, recent developments have challenged this optimism, triggering an important debate: Was India really in a Goldilocks phase, or was the economy weaker than projected?
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Recent Developments
- Understanding the Growth Reality
- Why the “Goldilocks” Narrative May Be Misleading?
- Way Forward
- Conclusion
Recent Developments:
- GDP calculation revision with a new base year (2022-23) revealed that earlier estimates (base year 2011-12) had overstated GDP.
- Global geopolitical instability, especially the US-Iran conflict, raised concerns over oil prices and supply disruptions.
- The Indian rupee weakened further against the US dollar.
- Japan and the UK overtook India in nominal GDP rankings.
- Rising concerns of slower growth with higher inflation (stagflationary risks) emerged.
Understanding the Growth Reality:
- Deceleration in nominal GDP growth:
- Key trends of nominal GDP (measures output at current prices) - Compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) is just above 10% (2014–2026), while it is around 12.3% (2004–2026), and 9.5% (2019–2026).
- Interpretation: India’s nominal GDP growth has steadily slowed over time, indicating weakening economic momentum.
- Moderate real GDP growth:
- Real GDP removes the impact of inflation and better reflects actual output growth. Key trends are a CAGR of above 12% since 2004, 6.2% (2014–2026), and below 5.5% (2019–2026).
- Interpretation: This growth rate is modest, especially for a developing country aspiring to become a developed nation by 2047.
Why the “Goldilocks” Narrative May Be Misleading?
- The base effect trap:
- A critical methodological caution, for example, cherry-picking post-COVID years distorts the true picture.
- The sharp rebound in 2021-22 and 2022-23 reflected recovery from the low base of the 2020 contraction, not genuine structural acceleration.
- Citing only these figures creates a false goldilocks narrative — misleading both public discourse and policymaking.
- Growth inadequacy for developed nation status:
- A real GDP growth rate of barely 5.5% over seven years is insufficient for India to achieve Viksit Bharat (Developed India) by 2047.
- Economists broadly agree that India needs sustained 8–9% real growth annually for such a transformation.
- Weak corporate earnings: Modest GDP growth has directly translated into underwhelming corporate earnings, reducing India's attractiveness to both domestic and foreign investors.
- Negative net FDI and rupee weakness:
- Net Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) has turned negative, reflecting diminished investor confidence.
- The resultant capital outflow is a major structural reason for the rupee's depreciation — notably, the rupee is weakening even as the dollar itself weakens against most global currencies, signalling an India-specific confidence deficit.
- GDP revision downgrades India's economic size:
- The new GDP series has effectively shrunk India's measured economy, meaning India is a smaller economy in absolute terms than previously believed.
- This is a significant setback to narratives around India's imminent rise to the world's third-largest economy.
- Energy import vulnerability: India's near-total dependence on energy imports via the Strait of Hormuz makes it acutely vulnerable to West Asian geopolitical instability, threatening both the current account and inflation management.
Way Forward:
- Structural reforms: Targeting manufacturing competitiveness, labour markets, and land acquisition are urgently needed to meaningfully lift the sustainable growth rate.
- Improving the investment climate: Through regulatory predictability and ease of doing business (EoDB) is essential to reversing the negative FDI trend.
- Energy diversification: Accelerating the transition to renewables and diversifying import sources — can reduce geopolitical exposure.
- Honest economic assessment by policymakers: Avoiding base-effect-driven optimism is necessary for designing credible long-term strategy.
- Transparent GDP methodology: And timely data revisions should be institutionalised to ensure policy decisions rest on accurate ground realities.
Conclusion:
- The recent data suggests that India’s economy may not have been in a true Goldilocks phase, but rather in a period where headline numbers masked deeper structural slowdowns.
- For India to realise its long-term ambitions, policymakers must move beyond celebratory narratives and undertake hard reforms that generate sustained growth, jobs, investment, and resilience.
- Only then can India transition from a large economy to a genuinely prosperous one.
Article
25 Apr 2026
Context
- The foundation of India’s democracy rests on the principle of universal adult franchise, envisioned by B. R. Ambedkar as a pathway from political equality to economic justice.
- However, this vision remains unfulfilled. Instead, structural inequality, marginalisation, and democratic exclusion have intensified, particularly in urban India.
- Groups such as migrants, urban poor, minorities, and unorganised workers face growing barriers to political participation, weakening the democratic framework.
The Growing Reality of Urban Disenfranchisement
- Urban India has experienced a steady erosion of voting rights due to bureaucratic processes and institutional barriers.
- The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls has amplified concerns regarding voter exclusion and accessibility.
- The principle that the right to vote should not depend on formal housing or rigid documentation, as emphasised by T. N. Seshan, is increasingly undermined.
- A significant proportion of urban residents, especially those in slums and informal settlements, remain excluded from voter lists.
- With nearly 28% of the population below 18 years, the remaining eligible population should ideally be enfranchised.
- However, according to the World Bank, about 40% of urban residents live in slums, highlighting the scale of disenfranchisement.
- This creates a paradox where those most affected by governance are least represented in electoral processes.
Consequences of Urban Disenfranchisement
- Threats to Electoral Integrity
- The integrity of elections is further challenged by concerns around voter secrecy.
- The use of electronic voting machines (EVMs), while efficient, allows booth-level data analysis.
- In smaller polling stations, voting patterns can be inferred, compromising confidentiality and exposing vulnerable groups to potential pressure.
- This weakens the principle of free and fair elections and raises questions about electoral transparency.
- Disproportionate Impact on the Urban Poor
- The burden of disenfranchisement falls disproportionately on Dalits, minorities, and economically weaker sections.
- High rates of voter deletions have been observed across major urban centres, reflecting systemic vulnerabilities.
- Factors such as high mobility, lack of permanent residence, and limited access to documentation create barriers to both registration and retention in voter rolls.
- This results in a dual challenge: difficulty in enrolling as voters and a high risk of deletion from electoral rolls.
- The exclusion of these groups reduces their political voice and reinforces cycles of social inequality and economic marginalisation.
Bureaucratic Barriers and Structural Exclusion
- The reliance on strict documentation, including proof of long-term residence, creates administrative hurdles that many urban residents cannot overcome.
- In a rapidly urbanising society driven by migration, such requirements are impractical and exclusionary.
- The system prioritises formal identity and residential stability, conditions rarely met by the urban poor.
- Instead of facilitating participation, these mechanisms discourage engagement, leading to reduced voter participation.
- This reflects a shift away from the inclusive spirit of democracy toward a system shaped by institutional rigidity.
Selective Filtration and Democratic Concerns
- A critical concern is the emergence of selective filtration within the electorate.
- The exclusion of certain populations, whether due to administrative bias or systemic design, raises questions about political neutrality.
- Groups perceived as inconvenient or less aligned with dominant interest risk being disproportionately excluded.
- Such practices undermine representative democracy by narrowing the electorate and distorting electoral outcomes.
- The weakening of inclusive participation threatens the legitimacy of governance and erodes trust in democratic institutions.
Conclusion
- Democratic rights, particularly the right to vote, are increasingly shaped by bureaucratic exclusion and structural constraints.
- Addressing this crisis requires simplifying registration processes, recognising the realities of urban life, and ensuring inclusive participation.
- Strengthening electoral access, safeguarding voter rights, and promoting institutional accountability are essential to restoring democratic integrity.
- Only then can the vision of political equality translating into economic justice be meaningfully realised.
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