The British government has urged India to further open up its financial sector to foreign banks.

“We are eager to see UK banks play a bigger role in the financial development of India,” Lord Sassoon, the Commercial secretary to Britain's Treasury department, told delegates at a conference on the Indian banking sector in London.

With foreign banks forming less than 10 per cent of the domestic banking industry in India, there was enormous scope for growth as well the potential for contributing to financial inclusion schemes in the country, he said.

“They can play a significant part in bringing modern banking services to millions more people,” he said.

More licences, regulatory clarity

Among the reforms sought are more licences for branches for those foreign banks that pose a lower risk to financial stability, and greater regulatory clarity, said Lord Sassoon.

He added that the government was also eager to see opening up in other financial sectors of the economy, particularly the insurance sector. He urged quick adoption of the pending legislation to increase the foreign investment in insurance joint ventures to 49 per cent, from 26 per cent. “We look to see further progress in making this a reality.”

“India's infrastructure requirements means huge requirements for sectors such as insurance,” he said.

Meeting next week

The potential growth of India's domestic banking sector is attracting widespread interest from abroad. India will become the world's third largest domestic banking sector by 2050, after China and the US, PricewaterhouseCoopers concluded in a report published in June. India's banking sector will overtake Britain's by 2030, and could even overtake China longer term, PwC added.

Lord Sassoon's comments come ahead of a meeting next week in London between Mr George Osborne, Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer, and the Finance Minister, Mr Pranab Mukherjee for the UK-India Economic and Financial Dialogue. Lord Sassoon said he hoped that further developments in the financial services sector would be among the issues discussed.