This Government Company Offers Up To 8% Interest On FD: Should You Invest?

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Tamil Nadu Transport Development Finance Corporation Ltd

Tamil Nadu Transport Development Finance Corporation Limited (TTDFC), is a wholly-owned non-banking finance company of the Government of Tamil Nadu. This government-owned company offers two types of attractive deposit schemes to the investors such as Period Interest Payment Scheme (PIPS) and Money Multiplier Scheme (MMS). Interest is paid monthly, quarterly, or yearly under PIPS, and the minimum deposit amount approved is Rs.50,000/-. Alternatively, under the Money Multiplier Scheme (MMS), interest is compounded quarterly at the prevailing rate and the minimum amount of money that can be deposited is Rs.50000.

TTDFC’s website is straightforward and easy to browse for investors. All operations, from opening a deposit account to withdrawing funds, are undertaken electronically. The TTDFC fixed deposit offers multiple benefits such as loan facility is available up to 75% of the deposit amount, nomination facilities are available subject to the provisions of the RBI, renewal of deposits, primary / joint account opening option, repayment of deposits on maturity, premature withdrawal option and much more.

Premature withdrawal

Premature withdrawal

After three months have passed after the deposit, no premature withdrawals are permitted. Premature withdrawals made after three months but before the end of the six-month period, will not be charged any interest. Premature withdrawals after 6 months will be charged 2% less interest than the rate for a 12-month of deposit. In the event of a premature withdrawal after 12 months, interest will be paid at a rate that is 1% lower than the rate at the maturity date. The deposit amount shall be repaid prematurely to the surviving depositor, in case of death of the primary account holder. If the deposit is requested to be closed prematurely, the depositors must provide at least 1-week prior notice, according to the company’s terms & conditions policy.

Interest Rates of TTDFC FD

Interest Rates of TTDFC FD

With effect from 18.01.2021, interest rates on fixed deposit schemes of Tamil Nadu Transport Development Finance Corporation Limited are in force. Below are the most recent interest rates on the Period Interest Payment Scheme and Money Multiplier Scheme of the company.

Scheme – I PERIODIC INTEREST PAYMENT SCHEME

Others In % In % In % Senior Citizen In % In %
Period Monthly Quarterly Annually Monthly (%) Quarterly (%) Annually (%)
24 7.25% 7.50%
36,48 7.75% 7.75% 7.98% 8.25% 8.25% 8.51%
60 8.00% 8.00% 8.24% 8.50% 8.50% 8.77%
Source: https://www.tdfc.in

Money Multiplier Scheme (MMS)

Others Senior Citizen
Period (Months) Basic Rate P.A (%) Effective Yield P.A (%) Basic Rate P.A (%) Effective Yield P.A (%)
12 7 7.19 7.25 7.45
24 7.25 7.73 7.5 8.01
36 7.75 8.63 8.25 9.25
48 7.75 8.99 8.25 9.66
60 8 9.72 8.5 10.46
Source: https://www.tdfc.in

Should you invest?

Should you invest?

As the Transport Development Finance Corporation Limited (TTDFC), is wholly owned by the Government of Tamil Nadu, the risk of your deposit is thus minimized. And apart from the deposit safety, the corporation is also promising an interest rate of 8% in the long-term and even a pretty good rate of 7% in the short term which is a maturity period of 12 months.

In the current scenario where leading banks such as SBI, Axis Bank, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank are offering an interest rate around 5.30% to 5.40%, investing in the fixed deposit scheme of TTDFC can be a smart move. The interest rates of the company are uncomparable as of now with any other banks, even small finance banks. Interest rates of both short-term and long-term deposits of TTDFC are very attractive, but here we suggest investors invest for short-term to counter interest rate risk against their deposit.

The reason behind my take is, currently all the major banks are offering low-interest rates due to record low key policy rates of RBI. And if the economy climbs in the near future and interest rates go up, then you will not get the benefit of higher interest rates, as you had locked in your deposit at the contracted rates. By investing for the short term you would not only avoid interest risk but also interest penalty on premature withdrawal on long-term deposits.

Apart from this risk, investors should also keep their eyes on the rising inflation which may give them returns less than the rate of inflation, if they are in the tax bracket of 30 per cent. So to earn higher returns from your FDs at TTDFC, it is better to invest for short term, and if investing for long-term then diversification across secure debt instruments or equity funds is a must to beat inflation resulting to earn risk-adjusted returns.



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Bad Bank to solve Rs 2 lakh crore bad loans, take NPAs off banks’ books; here’s how it will work

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Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Thursday announced that the Union government will guarantee Rs 30,600 worth of security receipts issued by the National Asset Reconstruction Company.

The Bad Bank is finally here, after a decade of discourse. It aims to help clean up banks’ books by taking over Rs 2 lakh crore bad loans. If it works as intended, Bad Bank may help cut system-wide bank NPAs (non-performing assets) by over 1%, and help recover some of bad debts too, analysts say. The National Asset Reconstruction Company (NARCL), as it is officially named, will acquire banks’ bad debt to resolve or liquidate. It will buy these stressed assets for a mix of cash, and government-guaranteed security receipts.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Thursday announced that the Union government will guarantee Rs 30,600 worth of security receipts issued by the National Asset Reconstruction Company (NARCL). “NARCL will acquire stressed assets through 15% cash payment to banks based on valuation and the rest 85% will be given as security receipts,” Nirmala Sitharaman said. The government-backed security receipts can only be invoked on resolution or liquidation.

What is NARCL? Why is it needed?

The National Asset Reconstruction Company (NARCL) was proposed by the Finance Minister in her Union Budget speech. NARCL, popularly known as Bad Bank, will function as an asset reconstruction company set up by banks to resolve stressed assets for smoother functioning. Public sector banks will have 51% ownership in NARCL. The bad bank intends to resolve stressed loan assets above Rs 500 crore each.

How the Bad Bank will work

Bad loan transfer: NARCL will take over bad loans worth Rs 2 lakh crore from banks, of which Rs 90,000 crore will be taken over in the first phase. The Ministry of Finance said that NARCL will acquire bad loans from banks for a mutually agreed-upon value (understandably, a net value after a haircut). NARCL will pay 15% of the agreed net value of the bad debt upfront in cash and the remaining 85% in form of security receipts. The banks would use this 15% cash upfront to reverse the debt write down. As for the security receipts for the remaining 85%, the bank would redeem those when the bad bank resolves or liquidates the bad debt; or, the bank may also trade these securities for cash.

Provision write-back: “These loans are fully provided in the books of the bank. The upfront cash received, 15% of the written-down value, would be reversed while the provisions for the balance (value of security receipts) are unlikely to be reversed even if it is fully provided,” analysts at Kotak Securities wrote in a note. “The larger release of provisions, if any, would be made as and when the cash is received on sale of these receipts or redemption of security receipts. The government guarantee on SRs can enable trading of these securities,” Kotak Securities added.

Government guarantee: The security receipts issued by NARCL are backed by the Union government guarantee. The government guarantee will cover any shortfall between the face value of the receipts and the actual realisation value of the bad loan.

Resolution is key

“How efficiently the professionals are resolving the stressed assets is to be monitored. One can argue that bad bank is likely to become a warehouse for stressed loans without expected recovery as it will be difficult to find buyers for legacy assets,” ICICI Securities said in a note. The Resolution of the proposed Rs 2 lakh crore of legacy stressed assets will lower GNPLs (gross non performing loans) by more than 2%, the note said. The estimated realisable value of 18% will lead to provisioning write-back of Rs 36,000 crore. “Through successful execution of phase-1, one can expect near term NPA reduction of >1% and NPA recoveries equivalent to 10bps of system credit,” ICICI Securities said.

Why is government guarantee needed?

The government said that resolution mechanisms of dealing with a backlog of NPAs typically require a backstop from the Government. “This imparts credibility and provides for contingency buffers. Hence, a Government Guarantee of up to Rs 30,600 crore will back Security Receipts (SRs) issued by NARCL. The guarantee will be valid for 5 years. The condition precedent for invocation of guarantee would be resolution or liquidation,” the finance ministry said.

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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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The following State Governments have offered to sell securities by way of auction, for an aggregate amount of ₹8,901 Cr. (Face Value).

Sr. No. State/UT Amount to be raised
(₹ Cr)
Additional Borrowing (Greenshoe) Option (₹ Cr) Tenure (Yrs) Type of Auction
1 Andhra Pradesh 500 14 Yield
500 19 Yield
2 Kerala 500 14 Yield
3 Madhya Pradesh 2000 Re-issue of 6.85% Madhya Pradesh SDL 2031 Issued on September 15, 2021 Price
4 Maharashtra 2500 Re-issue of 6.78% Maharashtra SDL 2031 Issued on May 25, 2021 Price
5 Nagaland 150 10 Yield
6 Rajasthan 1000 10 Yield
500 15 Yield
7 Sikkim 251 10 Yield
8 Tamil Nadu 1000 10 Yield
  TOTAL 8901      

The auction will be conducted on the Reserve Bank of India Core Banking Solution (E-Kuber) system on September 21, 2021 (Tuesday). The Government Stock up to 10% of the notified amount of the sale of each stock will be allotted to eligible individuals and institutions subject to a maximum limit of 1% of its notified amount for a single bid per stock as per the Scheme for Non-competitive Bidding Facility.

Both competitive and non-competitive bids for the auction should be submitted in electronic format on the Reserve Bank of India Core Banking Solution (E-Kuber) system on September 21, 2021 (Tuesday). The non-competitive bids should be submitted between 10.30 A.M. and 11.00 A.M. and the competitive bids should be submitted between 10.30 A.M. and 11.30 A.M.

In case of technical difficulties, Core Banking Operations Team (email; Phone no: 022-27595666, 022-27595415, 022-27523516) may be contacted.

For other auction related difficulties, IDMD auction team can be contacted (email; Phone no: 022-22702431, 022-22705125).

Only in the event of system failure, physical bids would be accepted. Such physical bids should be submitted to the Public Debt Office (email; Phone no: 022-22632527, 022-22701299) in the prescribed form obtainable from RBI website (https://www.rbi.org.in/Scripts/BS_ViewForms.aspx) before the auction timing ends.

The yield percent per annum expected by the bidder should be expressed up to two decimal points. An investor can submit more than one competitive bid at same/different rates of yield or prices in electronic format on the Reserve Bank of India Core Banking Solution (E-Kuber) system. However, the aggregate amount of bids submitted by a bidder should not exceed the notified amount for each State.

The Reserve Bank of India will determine the maximum yield /minimum price at which bids will be accepted. Securities will be issued for a minimum nominal amount of ₹10,000.00 and multiples of ₹10,000.00 thereafter.

The results of the auction will be announced on September 21, 2021 (Tuesday) and payment by successful bidders will be made during banking hours on September 22, 2021 (Wednesday) at Mumbai and at respective Regional Offices of RBI.

The State Government Stocks will bear interest at the rates determined by RBI at the auctions. For the new securities, interest will be paid half yearly on March 22 and September 22 of each year till maturity. The Stocks will be governed by the provisions of the Government Securities Act, 2006 and Government Securities Regulations, 2007.

The investment in State Government Stocks will be reckoned as an eligible investment in Government Securities by banks for the purpose of Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR) under Section 24 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949. The stocks will qualify for the ready forward facility.

Ajit Prasad
Director   

Press Release: 2021-2022/881

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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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Reserve Bank of India, Thiruvananthapuram invites e-Tender for the captioned work from Bank’s empaneled vendors/contractors under the applicable category of the work costing between ₹ 10 Lakh and ₹ 25 lakh. The tendering would be done through the e-Tendering portal of MSTC Ltd (https://www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi). All interested empaneled vendors /contractors must register themselves with MSTC Ltd through the above-mentioned website to participate in the tendering process. The Schedule of e-Tender is as follows:

a. Name of Work Renovation of Six (6) Class IV flats at Thamalam staff quarters, Reserve Bank of India, Thiruvananthapuram
b. e-Tender no RBI/Thiruvananthapuram/Estate/119/21-22/ET/162
c. Estimated Cost ₹ 18.29 lakh inclusive of all taxes
d. Mode of Tender e-Procurement System
(Online Part I – Techno-Commercial Bid and Part II – Price Bid through
(https://www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi)
e. Earnest Money Deposit (EMD) ₹ 36,580.00 (Thirty-six thousand, five hundred and eighty only) in the form of DD or BG, in favor of Reserve Bank of India, Thiruvananthapuram to be delivered in physical form at Estate Dept., Reserve Bank of India, Bakery Junction, Thiruvananthapuram – 695033
OR
Through NEFT
₹ 36,580.00 (Thirty-six thousand, five hundred and eighty only)
towards
Beneficiary Name: ESTTMLM
Beneficiary Ac No: 8614038
IFSC Code : RBIS0THPA01 (5th and 10th character: zero)
f. Date of NIT available to parties to download September 17, 2021 from 5:00 PM
g. Date of Pre-Bid Meeting September 27, 2021 at 11:00 AM
h. Date of starting of e-Tender for submission of Techno-Commercial Bid and price Bid in MSTC Portal September 28, 2021 from 5:00 PM
i. Date of closing of e-Tender for submission of Techno-Commercial Bid & Price Bid in MSTC Portal October 08, 2021 at 2:00 PM
j. Last date of submission of EMD October 08, 2021 by 1:00 PM
k. Date & time of opening of tender October 08, 2021 at 3:00 PM
l. Transaction Fee As charged by MSTC Ltd.

Amendments / Corrigendum to the Tender, if any, issued in future will only be notified on the RBI Website and MSTC Website and will not be published in the newspaper.

Regional Director
(Kerala and Lakshadweep)

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Amazon, Microsoft swoop in on India’s $24 billion farming data trove, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Amazon.com, Microsoft and Cisco Systems are among technology giants lining up to harness data from India’s farmers in an ambitious government-led productivity drive aimed at transforming an outmoded agricultural industry.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration, which is seeking to ensure food security in the world’s second-most populous nation, has signed preliminary agreements with the three U.S. titans and a slew of local businesses starting April to share farm statistics it’s been gathering since coming to power in 2014. Modi is betting the private sector can help farmers boost yields with apps and tools built from information such as crop output, soil quality and land holdings.

Jio Platforms Ltd., the venture controlled by billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries Ltd., and tobacco giant ITC Ltd. are among local powerhouses that have signed up for the program, the government said this week.

With the project, Modi is seeking to usher in long-due reforms to make over a farm sector that employs almost half of the nation’s 1.3 billion people and contributes about a fifth of Asia’s third-biggest economy.

The government is counting on the project’s success to boost rural incomes, cut imports, reduce some of the world’s worst food wastages with better infrastructure, and eventually compete with exporters such as Brazil, the U.S. and the European Union.

For global firms, it’s a stab at India’s agritech industry, which Ernst & Young estimates to have the potential to reach about $24 billion in revenue by 2025, with the current penetration being only 1%. It’s also a chance to deploy networks, artificial intelligence and machine learning in a developing country, while for e-commerce firms such as Amazon and Reliance, securing a steady stream of farm produce could help crack a groceries market that accounts for more than half of the $1 trillion in annual retail spending by Indians.

“This is a high impact industry and private players are sensing the opportunity and want to be a large part of it,” said Ankur Pahwa, a partner at consultancy EY India. “India has a very high amount of food wastage because of lack of technology and infrastructure. So there’s a huge upside to the program.”

The idea is simple: Seed all the information such as crop pattern, soil health, insurance, credit, and weather patterns into a single database and then analyze it through AI and data analytics. Then the goal is to develop personalized services for a sector replete with challenges such as peaking yields, water stress, degrading soil and lack of infrastructure including temperature-controlled warehouses and refrigerated trucks.

Under the agreement, the big tech companies help the government in developing proof of concepts to offer tech solutions for farm-to-fork services, which farmers will be able to access at their doorstep. If beneficial, firms would be able to sell the final product to the government and also directly to growers and the solutions would be scaled up at the national level.

So far, the government has seeded publicly available data for more than 50 million farmers of the 120 million identified land-holding growers. Some of the local companies that have signed up include Star Agribazaar Technology, ESRI India Technologies, yoga guru Baba Ramdev’s Patanjali Organic Research Institute and Ninjacart.

But success is far from guaranteed. The plan to rope in big corporations is already drawing fire from critics, who say the move is yet another attempt by the government to give the private sector a greater sway, a development that could hurt small and vulnerable farmers.

The program may even add fuel to the protracted protests Modi’s government has been struggling to tackle for more than nine months after controversial new agricultural laws riled up some farmers. With crucial state elections due in 2022, it may get tougher to sell the technology-to-help-agriculture plan to a farming community already suspicious of the government’s intentions.

“With this data they will know where the produce wasn’t good, and will buy cheap from farmers there and sell it at exorbitant prices elsewhere,” said Sukhwinder Singh Sabhra, a farmer from the northern state of Punjab, who has been protesting since November against the new farm laws. “More than the farmers it is the consumers who will suffer.”

Technology adoption is still at a nascent stage in India, said Apeksha Kaushik, principal analyst at Gartner. “Limited availability of technology infrastructure and recurring natural phenomena like floods, droughts have also worked against the deployment of digital solutions,” she said.

Anxiety over data privacy could be another challenge. Abhimanyu Kohar, a 27-year-old farmers’ leader, who has been supporting the protesting farmers, said it’s a “serious issue.” “We all know the record of the government in keeping the data safe,” he said.

Despite the hurdles, a few one-year pro bono pilot programs are already underway.

Microsoft has selected 100 villages to deploy AI and machine learning and build a platform. Amazon, which has already started offering real-time advice and information to farmers through a mobile app, is offering cloud services to solution providers. Representatives at the India offices of Microsoft and Amazon didn’t respond to emails seeking comment.

Star Agribazaar, whose co-founder Amit Mundawala calls the project a “game changer,” will collect data on agri land profiling, crop estimation, soil degradation and weather patterns. ESRI India is using geographic information system to generate data and create applications, according to Managing Director Agendra Kumar.

“Once you have the data, you can correlate with on-ground reality and improve your projections, take informed decisions and see which regions need policy intervention,” said P.K. Joshi, former director for South Asia at Washington-based International Food Policy Research Institute.

A similar data-driven system implemented in the southern state of Karnataka last year helped increase efficiency in delivery of government benefits, said Rajeev Chawla, the state’s additional chief secretary. Some bank loans have even been made to farmers using the centralized data, and all government programs, verification for insurance and loans and minimum support price are being routed through the mechanism, plugging leakages and eliminating frauds, he said.

Besides the tech giants, many smaller companies and startups are likely to join the program. When completed the project will form the core of a national digital agriculture ecosystem to help farmers realize better profitability with access to right information at the right time, and to facilitate better planning and execution of policies, according to the government’s consultation paper on digital agriculture.

“How this exercise will translate into action or lead to higher production and farm income, that remains to be seen,” said Madan Sabnavis, chief economist at Care Ratings Ltd.



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Amazon, Microsoft swoop in on India’s $24 billion farming data trove, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Amazon.com, Microsoft and Cisco Systems are among technology giants lining up to harness data from India’s farmers in an ambitious government-led productivity drive aimed at transforming an outmoded agricultural industry.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration, which is seeking to ensure food security in the world’s second-most populous nation, has signed preliminary agreements with the three U.S. titans and a slew of local businesses starting April to share farm statistics it’s been gathering since coming to power in 2014. Modi is betting the private sector can help farmers boost yields with apps and tools built from information such as crop output, soil quality and land holdings.

Jio Platforms Ltd., the venture controlled by billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries Ltd., and tobacco giant ITC Ltd. are among local powerhouses that have signed up for the program, the government said this week.

With the project, Modi is seeking to usher in long-due reforms to make over a farm sector that employs almost half of the nation’s 1.3 billion people and contributes about a fifth of Asia’s third-biggest economy.

The government is counting on the project’s success to boost rural incomes, cut imports, reduce some of the world’s worst food wastages with better infrastructure, and eventually compete with exporters such as Brazil, the U.S. and the European Union.

For global firms, it’s a stab at India’s agritech industry, which Ernst & Young estimates to have the potential to reach about $24 billion in revenue by 2025, with the current penetration being only 1%. It’s also a chance to deploy networks, artificial intelligence and machine learning in a developing country, while for e-commerce firms such as Amazon and Reliance, securing a steady stream of farm produce could help crack a groceries market that accounts for more than half of the $1 trillion in annual retail spending by Indians.

“This is a high impact industry and private players are sensing the opportunity and want to be a large part of it,” said Ankur Pahwa, a partner at consultancy EY India. “India has a very high amount of food wastage because of lack of technology and infrastructure. So there’s a huge upside to the program.”

The idea is simple: Seed all the information such as crop pattern, soil health, insurance, credit, and weather patterns into a single database and then analyze it through AI and data analytics. Then the goal is to develop personalized services for a sector replete with challenges such as peaking yields, water stress, degrading soil and lack of infrastructure including temperature-controlled warehouses and refrigerated trucks.

Under the agreement, the big tech companies help the government in developing proof of concepts to offer tech solutions for farm-to-fork services, which farmers will be able to access at their doorstep. If beneficial, firms would be able to sell the final product to the government and also directly to growers and the solutions would be scaled up at the national level.

So far, the government has seeded publicly available data for more than 50 million farmers of the 120 million identified land-holding growers. Some of the local companies that have signed up include Star Agribazaar Technology, ESRI India Technologies, yoga guru Baba Ramdev’s Patanjali Organic Research Institute and Ninjacart.

But success is far from guaranteed. The plan to rope in big corporations is already drawing fire from critics, who say the move is yet another attempt by the government to give the private sector a greater sway, a development that could hurt small and vulnerable farmers.

The program may even add fuel to the protracted protests Modi’s government has been struggling to tackle for more than nine months after controversial new agricultural laws riled up some farmers. With crucial state elections due in 2022, it may get tougher to sell the technology-to-help-agriculture plan to a farming community already suspicious of the government’s intentions.

“With this data they will know where the produce wasn’t good, and will buy cheap from farmers there and sell it at exorbitant prices elsewhere,” said Sukhwinder Singh Sabhra, a farmer from the northern state of Punjab, who has been protesting since November against the new farm laws. “More than the farmers it is the consumers who will suffer.”

Technology adoption is still at a nascent stage in India, said Apeksha Kaushik, principal analyst at Gartner. “Limited availability of technology infrastructure and recurring natural phenomena like floods, droughts have also worked against the deployment of digital solutions,” she said.

Anxiety over data privacy could be another challenge. Abhimanyu Kohar, a 27-year-old farmers’ leader, who has been supporting the protesting farmers, said it’s a “serious issue.” “We all know the record of the government in keeping the data safe,” he said.

Despite the hurdles, a few one-year pro bono pilot programs are already underway.

Microsoft has selected 100 villages to deploy AI and machine learning and build a platform. Amazon, which has already started offering real-time advice and information to farmers through a mobile app, is offering cloud services to solution providers. Representatives at the India offices of Microsoft and Amazon didn’t respond to emails seeking comment.

Star Agribazaar, whose co-founder Amit Mundawala calls the project a “game changer,” will collect data on agri land profiling, crop estimation, soil degradation and weather patterns. ESRI India is using geographic information system to generate data and create applications, according to Managing Director Agendra Kumar.

“Once you have the data, you can correlate with on-ground reality and improve your projections, take informed decisions and see which regions need policy intervention,” said P.K. Joshi, former director for South Asia at Washington-based International Food Policy Research Institute.

A similar data-driven system implemented in the southern state of Karnataka last year helped increase efficiency in delivery of government benefits, said Rajeev Chawla, the state’s additional chief secretary. Some bank loans have even been made to farmers using the centralized data, and all government programs, verification for insurance and loans and minimum support price are being routed through the mechanism, plugging leakages and eliminating frauds, he said.

Besides the tech giants, many smaller companies and startups are likely to join the program. When completed the project will form the core of a national digital agriculture ecosystem to help farmers realize better profitability with access to right information at the right time, and to facilitate better planning and execution of policies, according to the government’s consultation paper on digital agriculture.

“How this exercise will translate into action or lead to higher production and farm income, that remains to be seen,” said Madan Sabnavis, chief economist at Care Ratings Ltd.



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Punjab cabinet okays rules to promote and develop MSMEs, puts in place mechanism to mitigate delayed payments, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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LUDHIANA: The Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) in Punjab have got a major impetus with the state cabinet approving rules to provide a well-formulated legal framework for their operations, with effective mechanism to mitigate the problem of delayed payments to such enterprises.

The Cabinet, led by Chief Minister Captain Amarinder Singh, on Friday okayed the Punjab Micro and Small Enterprises Facilitation Councils Rules, 2021 under Micro Small and Medium Enterprises Development (MSMED) Act, 2006, to facilitate promotion, development and competitiveness of MSMEs.

According to a spokesperson of the Chief Minister’s Office, these rules provide the first-ever legal framework for recognition of the concept of “enterprise” (comprising both manufacturing and services), and integrating the three tiers of these enterprises, namely Micro, Small and Medium. Apart from clearer and more progressive classification of each category of enterprises, particularly the small ones, the Act provides for a statutory consultative mechanism at the national level, with wide representation of all sections of stakeholders and with a wide range of advisory functions. One of the silent features of Act is that it provides an effective mechanism for mitigating the problems of delayed payments of micro and small enterprises.

All district level Micro and Small Enterprises Facilitation Councils established under the chairmanship of respective Deputy Commissioners across the State would ensure proper implementation of the aforesaid rules to ensure development of MSMEs in the State, and to resolve the issues of delayed payments effectively for betterment of Micro & Small Entrepreneurs under the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development Act, 2006.

Notably, the respective Deputy Commissioner of these districts shall exercise the powers of the Director, Industries and Commerce, and shall be the Chairperson of the Council with Lead District Bank Manager of the concerned District as Members, besides two members from the association of micro or small Industry or enterprises in the state MSMEs as non-official members. The General Manager of District Industries Centre would be the Member Secretary.



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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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Reserve Bank of India announces the auction of Government of India Treasury Bills as per the following details:

Sr. No Treasury Bill Notified Amount
(in ₹ crore)
Auction Date Settlement Date
1 91 Days 9,000 September 22, 2021
(Wednesday)
September 23, 2021
(Thursday)
2 182 Days 4,000
3 364 Days 4,000
  Total 17,000    

The sale will be subject to the terms and conditions specified in the General Notification F.No.4(2)-W&M/2018 dated March 27, 2018 along with the Amendment Notification No.F.4(2)-W&M/2018 dated April 05, 2018, issued by Government of India, as amended from time to time. State Governments, eligible Provident Funds in India, designated Foreign Central Banks and any person or institution specified by the Bank in this regard, can participate on non-competitive basis, the allocation for which will be outside the notified amount. Individuals can also participate on non-competitive basis as retail investors. For retail investors, the allocation will be restricted to a maximum of 5 percent of the notified amount.

The auction will be Price based using multiple price method. Bids for the auction should be submitted in electronic format on the Reserve Bank of India’s Core Banking Solution (E-Kuber) system on Wednesday, September 22, 2021, during the below given timings:

Category Timing
Competitive bids 10:30 am – 11:30 am
Non-Competitive bids 10:30 am – 11:00 am

Results will be announced on the day of the auction.

Payment by successful bidders to be made on Thursday, September 23, 2021.

Only in the event of system failure, physical bids would be accepted. Such physical bids should be submitted to the Public Debt Office (email; Phone no: 022-22632527, 022-22701299) in the prescribed form obtainable from RBI website (https://www.rbi.org.in/Scripts/BS_ViewForms.aspx) before the auction timing ends. In case of technical difficulties, Core Banking Operations Team should be contacted (email; Phone no: 022-27595666, 022-27595415, 022-27523516). For other auction related difficulties, IDMD auction team can be contacted (email; Phone no: 022-22702431, 022-22705125).

Ajit Prasad
Director   

Press Release: 2021-2022/880

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IIFL Home Finance signs pact with PNB for co-lending, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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IIFL Home Finance on Friday signed an agreement with Punjab National Bank (PNB), the country’s second largest public sector bank, for co-lending.

IIFL Home Finance expects to grow their loan books by 25 per cent with this association. The loan sourcing and servicing will be managed by IIFL Home Finance and 80 per cent of the loan will be provided by PNB.

IIFL Home Finance will service customers through the entire loan cycle — from sourcing, documentation and collection to loan servicing.

This is the fourth agreement signed by IIFL Home Finance with banks. Earlier this year, it signed agreements with ICICI Bank, Central Bank of India and Standard Chartered Bank.

IIFL Home Finance has disbursed loans totalling Rs 170 crore under these arrangements so far.

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Pension subscriber base rises to 4.53 crore till August, says PFRDA

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The Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) on Friday said the subscriber base under its flagship pension schemes rose by 24 per cent in August this year to over 4.53 crore.

The PFRDA administers two pension schemes — National Pension System (NPS) and Atal Pension Yojana (APY).

“The number of subscribers in various schemes under the National Pension System (NPS) rose to 453.41 lakh by end-August 2021 from 365.47 lakh in August 2020, showing a year-on-year increase of 24.06 per cent,” the PFRDA said in a release.

The numbers of subscribers under APY grew by 33.20 per cent to 304.51 lakh as of August 31, 2021, showed PFRDA data.

Growth in AUM

Asset wise, at August-end, total pension assets under management stood at ₹6,47,621 crore, showing a year-on-year growth of 32.91 per cent, it added.

Of this, the assets under APY stood at ₹18,059 crore, registering a growth of nearly 33 per cent from a year ago.

NPS mainly caters to the organised sector, including the Central and State government employees, autonomous bodies, and private corporations.

Atal Pension Yojana (APY) targets the workers in the unorganised sector, which generates the bulk of employment in the country.

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