Key Points

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman urged financial regulators to speed up refunds of unclaimed deposits, shares, and pensions. She emphasized district-level camps for seamless refunds and simplified digital KYC for NRIs. The FSDC also discussed cybersecurity resilience and financial stability measures. The meeting included RBI, SEBI, and IRDAI officials to strengthen inter-regulatory coordination.

Key Points: FM Sitharaman Pushes Faster Refunds for Unclaimed Financial Assets

  • Sitharaman calls for faster refunds of unclaimed deposits and dividends
  • Regulators to coordinate district-level refund camps
  • Common KYC norms proposed for NRIs
  • FSDC discusses cybersecurity and financial stability
3 min read

FM Sitharaman calls for speeding up refunds of unclaimed amounts in financial sector

Finance Minister urges regulators to expedite refunds of unclaimed deposits, shares, and pensions while simplifying KYC norms for NRIs.

"Special district-level camps must be held to ensure expeditious and seamless refund of such assets to rightful owners. - Nirmala Sitharaman"

Mumbai, June 10

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Tuesday urged regulators and departments to expedite the process of refund to rightful owners of unclaimed amounts in the financial sector, including bank deposits, dividends, shares, post office accounts, insurance, and pension funds.

Addressing the 29th meeting of the Financial Stability and Development Council (FSDC) here, the Finance Minister said that special district-level camps must be held to ensure the expeditious and seamless refund of such assets to rightful owners.

"This drive is to be conducted in coordination with the RBI, the SEBI, the MCA, the PFRDA, and the IRDA, along with banks, pension agencies, insurance companies, etc. The unclaimed amounts comprise deposits in banks; unclaimed shares and dividends are managed by the IEPFA; and unclaimed insurance and pension funds are with the IRDAI and the PFRDA, respectively," she said.

The Finance Minister also exhorted the Council to take proactive steps to ensure that citizens should have a seamless experience with respect to KYC processes across the financial sector.

She called for prescribing common KYC norms, simplification and digitalisation of the KYC process, including digital onboarding for Non-Resident Indians (NRIs), including PIOs and OCIs, in the Indian securities market.

The FSDC deliberated on issues related to macrofinancial stability and India’s preparedness to deal with them. In light of the analysis of cybersecurity regulations, sectoral preparedness, and the recommendations of the Financial Sector Assessment Programme (FSAP) 2024-25, the FSDC considered strengthening the cyber resilience framework of the Indian financial sector through a financial sector-specific cybersecurity strategy.

Issues relating to formulating a strategy for implementing the past decisions and the budget announcements were also discussed at the meeting.

These included establishing an appropriate framework by regulators for evaluating and enhancing the responsiveness of regulations and subsidiary instructions, and analysing trends in financing flows as part of a strategy to increase the investment ratio.

Besides, the FSDC deliberated on the emerging trends from the domestic and global macro-financial situation and stressed the need to be vigilant. The Council recognised the need for proactive efforts to mitigate potential risks to financial stability while adopting adequate safeguards for the financial system’s resilience. The members decided to strengthen the inter-regulatory coordination for the wider development of the financial sector.

The FSDC also took note of the activities undertaken by the FSDC Sub-Committee, chaired by the RBI Governor and the action taken by members on the pending past decisions of the FSDC.

The FSDC meeting was attended by Minister of State for Finance Pankaj Choudhary, RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra, SEBI chief Tuhin Kant Pandey, Finance Secretary and Secretary, Department of Economic Affairs Ajay Seth, Secretary, Department of Financial Services Nagaraju Maddirala and other senior Finance Ministry and IRDAI officials.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

Here are 6 diverse Indian perspective comments for the article:
R
Rajesh K.
Finally some action on unclaimed funds! My late father had some small deposits in a nationalized bank that we couldn't access due to paperwork issues. Hope this initiative reaches common people like us. The district-level camps are a good idea 👍
P
Priya M.
While the intention is good, I hope they don't make the KYC process more complicated in the name of simplification. Last time I tried updating my KYC for mutual funds, it took 3 visits to the branch. Digital onboarding for NRIs is much needed though!
A
Amit S.
Cybersecurity focus is crucial - just last month my friend lost ₹25,000 in a phishing scam. Banks need to educate customers better along with strengthening their systems. Good to see the government prioritizing this.
S
Sunita R.
My NRI brother has been facing so many issues investing in India. If they can truly simplify the process for overseas Indians, it would bring more foreign investment. But implementation is key - hope this isn't just another announcement.
V
Vikram J.
The amount of unclaimed money in India must be huge. Instead of just refunding, they should use some portion for financial literacy programs. Many people don't even know they might have unclaimed assets!
N
Neha P.
Good move but execution matters. Last year's similar initiative didn't reach rural areas properly. They should involve local administration and panchayats to create awareness. Also, the process should be available in regional languages.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50