Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications Friday, Jul 14, 2006 |
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Opinion
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Editorial A code for bank service
The Banking Codes and Standards Board of India (BCSBI) has within a short time of its inception collaborated with banks and the Reserve Bank of India to formulate a new Code of Bank's Commitment to Customers. The Code is not binding on individual banks but they are expected to adhere to it anyway. The BCSBI has been given the task of evaluating and overseeing the Code and providing the RBI independent feedback. Drawing important lessons from the experiences of the UK and other developed countries in the area of customer service, the Code combines the best features of self-regulation with the benchmarks that are more common to regulation. In India there is a long tradition of both.
There was very little non-price competition. Partly because of the absence of technology, value addition was generally out of the question and, most significantly, profitability was not an overriding goal. Yet, banks were emphasising customer service in a number of familiar ways: Customer service meets, redressing complaints and by motivating counter staff. Since banking products and services were the same, individual banks could promise their customers no more than time-schedules to, say, encash cheques or have drafts issued.
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