5 Things India’s Banks Must Do For Viksit Bharat 2047 Mission; Report Finds Key Details – News18

Boston Consulting Group (BCG) in association with FICCI and the Indian Banks’ Association has released a report titled “Banking for a Viksit Bharat” at FIBAC 2024. As per the report, India’s ambition to achieve a $30 trillion GDP by 2047 will require a 20 times growth in the financial services sector, with banks playing a pivotal role.

India, being a predominantly bank-led economy, will require the banking sector to play an anchor role while the other financial asset classes continue to grow much faster. This will require $4 trillion of capital base in banks, 1/3rd of which will have to be fresh capital deployment.

India’s banking system is in a strong position today – characterised by high profitability, robust capital adequacy, and low levels of non-performing assets (NPAs). This provides an ideal launchpad for the Viksit Bharat mission, the report added.

“The journey towards a $30 trillion economy by 2047 is an ambitious yet achievable goal for India, demanding a transformation in the financial services sector, with banks at the forefront. India’s banking system is in a strong position today acting as an ideal launch pad for the Viksit Bharat mission. It will have to be built for the next 2 decades through structural shifts – growing deposits, enhancing asset quality, and improving productivity while advancing digital capabilities and future competencies,” said Ruchin Goyal, MD and senior partner at BCG, and co-author of the report.

“One of the primary objectives of the banking industry is to ensure financial inclusion, creating opportunities for every individual to grow and contribute to the nation’s progress. To fuel inclusion and credit growth, we must continue to innovate and reimagine our deposit strategies, aligning them more closely with the evolving needs and preferences of our customers. This growth will be aided by the full potential of our workforce which must be harnessed using digitisation and emerging technologies like GenAI,” said MV Rao, chairman of the Indian Banks’ Association, and co-author of the report.

“India’s Digital Public Infrastructure has laid the foundation for a strong and resilient financial infrastructure and accelerated the pace of digitisation. It is now about taking capabilities to the next level and building for the next two decades – Resilience, climate and cyber security need to be strengthened, with centralised, real-time network and specialised talent. The banking sector’s success is instrumental in making India a developed nation,” said Jyoti Vij, director general at FICCI, and co-author of the report.

The report highlights five key structural themes that banks need to work on for the continued success of the Indian banking sector;

A) Future of Household savings:

Households are increasingly shifting from physical to financial assets, and from informal to formal borrowing channels. Bank deposits are shifting to pension savings and capital market investments, while retail lending expands. Despite this, financial assets and borrowings remain under-penetrated, offering significant growth potential. Banks must innovate deposit products, enhance customer awareness, and adopt new operating models to sustain growth. Structural support is needed to create new deposit pools for targeted lending, as banks continue to play a key role in funding large-scale projects and sectors.

B) Addressing challenges with asset quality & pockets of leverage:

Retail lending has driven financial inclusion and profitability for the banking industry. The shape of this growth is very different though. Unsecured lending has grown much faster. The unsecured to secured loan mix is 30:70 in India (vs. 10:90 for many large economies).

India has a large adult population outside the formal workforce (~90%), and hence largely outside the ambit of formal financing channels. India has quickly gone from being a data-poor to a data-rich country. Lenders will have to re-imagine the operating model and underwriting capabilities to serve this segment. India will need to chart its course on driving retail and MSME lending penetration.

C) Banks need to take a bold vision on productivity:

India Stack has revolutionised the financial infrastructure, driving digitisation in payments and product sales. However, rising costs, driven by increased technology spending, outpace income growth. Despite high-tech spending, banks globally are not seen as innovative, and Indian banks are still under-indexed in IT investments. Banks will need to boldly reimagine their operating model and break the ‘sticky’ legacy cost structure.

D) Banks to continue investing to drive digital funnel growth:

Leading Indian banks rank among the top globally in digital maturity, with BCG’s proprietary benchmarking tool showing that both private and public sector banks score higher than global peers across various parameters related to customer experience. Many banks need to continue investing to bridge the gap. While India Stack has enabled excellence in payments, banks still need to monetise digital opportunities across other dimensions like product fulfilment journeys and money insights.

E) Banks to focus on building future capabilities:

The Indian banking system has made significant strides in building future-ready competencies but must embrace the next wave of opportunities. Resilience must extend beyond technology to encompass entire business processes.

Banks face a “GenAI paradox,” struggling to scale initiatives beyond pilots. This will require mission-mode COEs to address key capability challenges. Climate risk presents both threats and a $2.5 trillion financing opportunity, demanding a shift in operating models. Additionally, India’s banks must tackle increasing cyber risks, necessitating a centralised, real-time network and specialised talent to mitigate threats.

While India’s banking sector has made significant strides, achieving the Viksit Bharat mission will require sustained momentum. The banking sector’s success is instrumental in making India a developed nation.

A concerted effort of industry participants, government and regulators will be critical to facilitate this – key actions include:

  • Banks to innovate products and drive customer awareness
  • Regulators to lead the way in the use of advanced analytics to enhance the efficacy & efficiency of supervision
  • Government to promote consolidation of smaller segments of the industry to unlock value.