Sunday Reading
New Delhi,
11 May 2009
Changing Lives
BANKING ON BEGGARS
By Michael Smith
(UK-based author & journalist)
Banking should help the world’s poorest people and not just be profit
driven, says banker J S Parthiban. As
the country elects a new government, he tells how he has pioneered banking
schemes to free people from the grip of exploiting money lenders.
I have always believed that
banking is a service-oriented holistic business, rather than just an enterprise
where customer service is only part of the overall profit strategy.
In 1998 I became Branch Manager
of Indian Bank at Connaught Place,
New Delhi. I used my position to
help beggars and street vendors to manage their money intelligently and live a
life of dignity. There were no bank schemes designed exclusively for them. Yet many
people were selling flowers, water, toys and other things on the streets. I watched them doing their business, wondering what they
did with all the money they earned.
I was astonished to find that
they earned Rs 500 to Rs 600 daily, which not even a graduate or a government
official earned. But they also had to pay bribes demanded by the police to
allow them to operate on the streets. They were all street smart and the
beggars took their work very seriously. But they were ignorant in money
management.
Most of
them came from nearby States, such as Uttar Pradesh and Bihar,
with a lot of dreams, leaving their families back home. They wanted to earn
enough money to clear their debts back home, and get their daughters married.
They came hoping to return home soon with lots of money and gifts for
family members.
But the reality in Delhi was a lot
different. There were no steady jobs and their earnings were never enough to
make both ends meet. They would borrow from money lenders, at very high
interest rates, to get over their immediate problems and frequent borrowings
turned into a habit. They never earned or saved enough to clear their debts or
take money back home.
Living alone, with no proper
place to stay, led them into a life of frustration with no way out. As a result
they became alcoholic with some of them getting into the habit of visiting
prostitutes.
Their situation would turn from
bad to worse when they visited their villages during festivals or other occasions.
They would borrow more from money lenders and visit home with lots of gifts and
cash, hiding the reality of their lives in Delhi. Once back, they would have to work
twice as hard. The high interest rates of money lenders never allowed them to
get out of the debt trap. Yet they were totally ignorant of the role that a
bank could play in managing their earnings.
I wanted them to get out of debt
and live a life of dignity. So I took the initiative to educate them. It took
time and a lot of patience to earn their confidence. I would stand by their
side, observe them, pick up a conversation and show my
genuine concern to understand their lives and businesses.
They
opened up and started talking but rejected outright my suggestion of
saving money in the bank. They complained that there was no money to save when
they didn’t even have enough to make both ends meet. My persistence convinced
them at least to give it a try, with small savings to begin with.
They had no idea how to go about
it. It was difficult to open a bank account in those days, with many documents
needed such as the PAN (Permanent Account Number), ration cards and proof of
residence. So I made sure that my bank staff made them comfortable in their
understanding of how to open a savings account. In a few initial cases, I even
took their personal guarantee. Their need was genuine and I took the risk.
The next logical step was for
them to open a fixed deposit, which required less convincing. We opened almost
500 savings accounts and 300 recurring deposit accounts for beggars, newspaper
vendors, fruit vendors, tea and paan wallahs,
shoe shine boys, restaurant waiters, auto rickshaw and taxi drivers,
housewives, police constables and inspectors--everyone opening an account for
the first time.
I remember a young man who sold
cold water on the street for 50 paisa per glass. He would earn anything from Rs
600 to Rs 700 per day. And, he would have Rs 20,000 to Rs 25,000 in his pocket
and didn’t know where to keep it. The idea of a bank savings account clicked
with him. By the time I moved to Tamil Nadu in 2002, he had about Rs 2 lakhs in
his account and had repaid his entire loan. He was free from worry and started
spending quality time with his family.
Another person was worried about
how to educate his son in a decent institute. He found that the bank could take
care of the financial aspect, thanks to some schemes with the bank where he had
deposited his money. A lady, who used to sell fruits, saved enough money to get
one of her daughters married and came back again to set up another account with
us.
Now I am the branch manager of
the India Bank near Salem,
a city of over 750,000 people in Tamil Nadu. The State government initiated
Self Help Group schemes, mostly for women who would hardly step out of their homes.
The banks lend money at a low interest rate for their needs. Under the scheme
the groups can distribute the loan amongst themselves charging an extra 1%. The
additional amount is saved by them for future lending to others in the group at
a fraction of the rate. My branch has helped around 188 Self Help Groups,
with loans totaling Rs 22.5 million. It gives me great joy to see
so many groups getting prizes from the government.
In one poor village I discovered
the tattered life of families where they cut trees for firewood and brewed
illicit alcohol for a livelihood. It was a life they despised but knew no other
way to make a living. The husbands were alcoholics making the life of the women
and children a constant torture. I listened to their stories and wanted to do
something. I convinced them to take a loan from the bank to buy buffalos and
work to change their lives.
Today, they are selling milk and
converting buffalo dung into biogas. There is no more brewing in the village
and no more cutting down the forests. They have already repaid their entire
loan. Life for them has taken a complete U-turn for the better.
We have worked out other schemes
to empower individuals to live a life of dignity, including auto-rickshaw
drivers, policemen, prisoners, and even eunuchs who are too often marginalized.
I personally organize meetings with them to explain the schemes that will
empower them economically. They understand and are saving with the bank, which
is playing a key role in transforming society in and around Salem. It gives me great satisfaction to
bring happiness to so many poor individuals and their families.
I learnt from my parents that
serving others is like serving God, and to always look for opportunities to
help others in need. My meeting with the group now called Initiatives of
Change, in my student days was also a turning point that changed me forever. It
spoke of building a new world and that to change the world one must start with
oneself. This has been my conviction ever since. --INFA
(Copyright,
India News and Feature Alliance)
|