Sunday, 26 April 2020

COVID-19 crisis shows class bias in banking, required rethink of biometric authentication to access benefits

Recently, a 62-year-old woman in Jharkhand died in a bank queue after waiting for more than two hours under the scorching sun to withdraw money from her Jan Dhan account.

In the midst of the extended lockdown, millions of poor women across India have been similarly queuing outside banks struggling to withdraw the government’s PM Garib Kalyan Yojana (PMGKY) cash transfers.

Representational image. Getty Images

Representational image. Getty Images

On the other hand, in a public relations faux pas, television channels have aired videos of middle-class women with gold chains around their necks and fire extinguishers in their homes thanking the prime minister for the meagre ₹500 relief.

The most tragic fallout of the COVID-19 lockdown is that it has exposed threadbare the class, caste and religious prejudices pernicious in Indian society.

The haunting images of the exodus of penniless migrants fleeing industrial cities, inhuman police brutality and children dying of starvation in Dalit hamlets will be hard to erase from our nation’s collective memory.

More ration shops than banks

Even if we limit ourselves only to the banking system in the context of the current parsimonious PMGKY relief package, the acute class bias is evident on four fronts:

First, only 29 percent of Indians have these Jan Dhan accounts, though their vision is to bank “every adult.” More importantly, 53 percent of poor women do not possess these zero balance accounts, as per an estimate by Yale University.

Therefore, while on the other hand nearly half of poor households have been deprived, one of every four of these cash transfers to 200 million women’s bank accounts, have been dispatched to women who are essentially not poor.

 Chart 2

Source: Lok Sabha, unstarred Question No. 243, Answered on Monday, June 24, 2019

 Second, the relief package doubles the ration and provides five kilos of free foodgrain over and above existing entitlements only to those families with National Food Security Act, 2013 (NFSA) ration cards.

But 21 percent of poor women do not have these precious cards. Since the imposition of Aadhaar, the red tape to procure both ration cards and Jan Dhan bank accounts is largely similar in most states.

So some families will receive double rations and cash, while the most marginalised households and migrants are most likely to be excluded from both.

Third, there are more fair price shops than bank branches across nearly all states. As per the Yale survey, 26 percent of poor women reported that they lived more than five kilometers from their nearest bank.

Universalisation of the Public Distribution System (PDS) with provision of free foodgrain to all families, including migrants and those without ration cards, is therefore the most prudent immediate solution to combat endemic hunger.

Chart 1

Source: NFSA website and RBI Database on Indian Economy, Bank Branch Statistics, December 2019

Fourth, there is a distinct urban bias across the banking infrastructure. In urban areas, there are more bank branches and ATMs (596 per million population) than in rural (102).

To compensate in the last decade, more business or banking correspondents (BCs) who undertake transactions with POS (point of sale) machines, have been hired in rural India (534 per million population) than in urban areas (295).

But post-COVID19, their operations, which depend on Aadhaar biometric authentication, could spread infection.

Chart 3

Source: RBI Database on Indian Economy, Bank Branch Statistics and Data Releases, December 2019

 Future of cash transfers

Nevertheless, oddly, the Home Ministry on 25 March sanctioned BCs and ATMs to continue their respective banking operations. Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Rajasthan have even passed specific orders. The finance minister too encouraged their operation. Despite the lockdown, the RBI has estimated that 80 percent of BCs are functional.

However, the ground reality is that BCs are under acute strain with limited transport, police harassment and fear of infection. National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development has advised that BCs should be provided with health insurance given the high risk associated with their jobs.

Some banks have sanctioned an extra honorarium to purchase masks, gloves, disinfectants and sanitisers. But, in reality most BCs are not adequately aware or trained in the usage of disinfectants.

A pizza delivery employee in Delhi who tested positive for COVID-19 potentially put 72 families at risk. For BCs, the physical interaction and proximity necessary is even greater as customers necessarily need to place their finger impressions on the glass panel.

While many studies are being conducted at a feverish pace and estimates vary, most agree that SARS-CoV-2 — the novel coronavirus that causes the COVID-19 disease — can survive on glass for four days, on surgical latex gloves for up to eight hours and as air droplets for three hours.

Figure 4: Survival rates of the virus on non-disinfected surfaces

SARS-CoV-2 or HCoV*

Persistence (maximum hours)

Tissue Paper

3

Copper

4

Surgical Gloves (latex)

8

Disposable Gown, Cardboard, Wood, Cloth

24

Stainless Steel, Plastic

72 - 168

Glass, Banknotes

96

Source: Chin et al (2020), Stability of SARS-CoV-2 in different environmental conditions, The Lancet Microbe (2 April 2020), van Doremalen et al, Aerosol and Surface Stability of SARS-CoV-2 as Compared with SARS-CoV-1, New England Journal of Medicine (16 April 2020), Kampf et al, (2020), Persistence of coronaviruses on inanimate surfaces and their activation with biocidal agents, The Journal of Hospital Infection, 104, 3, Review, 246-251 (6 February 2020)*(SARS) = Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus or (HCoV) = Endemic human coronaviruses

 Therefore, as we enter an era with new waves of infectious global pandemics, it is essential to rethink the operations of BCs. Biometric authentication puts them and their customers at considerable risk of infection transmission even in asymptomatic stages.

Recognising this danger, the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) was quick to suspend Aadhaar-based attendance systems across government offices and Karnataka, Jharkhand and Kerala, among many other states, have discontinued biometrics in fair price ration shops.

In the near future, it would be wise to altogether discontinue Aadhaar-based fingerprint authentication across welfare programmes and banking operations, which have anyways proved to be cumbersome and error prone.

Other suitable technologies with lower risk of such as contactless cards, which also enable offline usage, can be considered as they are touch-free and retained by the customer. In countries like the United Kingdom they are more ubiquitous than even currency notes as tickets for public transportation, identity cards and bank credit cards.

Recently, the Indian government too has begun to issue limited RuPay contactless cards.

Every crisis presents an opportunity. Immediately, to quell the surge of hunger and unemployment, the food ministry must adopt a universal PDS with free foodgrain for at least six months. India also definitely needs to rethink the modality of cash transfers, BCs and biometric authentication as the world moves to a “new normal.”

Business as usual will no longer be an option.



from Firstpost India Latest News https://ift.tt/35cBtPE

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