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RBI makes first move in savings account rate change

The Reserve Bank of India has said in a draft paper that the savings account interest rate should be deregulated. This rate is currently 3.5% and is the only interest rate offered by banks that is enforced across all banks.

Updated on: May 06, 2011 09:23 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By
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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has said in a draft paper that the savings account interest rate should be deregulated. This rate is currently 3.5% and is the only interest rate offered by banks that is enforced across all banks.

HT Image
HT Image

Even though knowledgeable investors do not keep a significant proportion of their money in savings accounts, this is a useful move.

On Tuesday, the RBI announced a hike of 0.5 percentage point in the savings deposit rate — the first increase in 19 years — taking it to 4% with immediate effect.

Savings bank accounts are the primary savings vehicle, almost by definition, of the least well-informed class of savers. As such, the only way these people have of maximising their returns is if the RBI creates conditions that facilitate that. A few months ago, RBI had forced banks to change the method of calculating the savings bank interest on the daily average balance instead of the minimum balance. This made the calculation fair and enhanced returns for customers.

Savings bank returns apart, banks products are the default 'investment' that a majority of Indians use, and it's a fact that bank's rules and regulations are not setup to maximise your returns. This means that if you are using fixed deposits as an investment vehicle—and a lot or people are—then you need to track their expiry carefully because lapsed fixed deposits are major source of leakage of returns. The ideal would be if the RBI would fix the underlying rules, but failing that, investors need to take care of their interest themselves.

 
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