Success through synergy: RBI Deputy Governor warns of rising risks, calls for stronger collaboration
New Delhi, December 1
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Deputy Governor, Swaminathan J on Monday outlined a six-point agenda to strengthen India's banking ecosystem amid rapid technological shifts, emerging risks and rising customer expectations.
Addressing the Standard Chartered Bank's annual flagship event, "Success Through Synergy," the RBI DG emphasized that collaboration, not competition alone, will define the next phase of India's financial sector growth.
The audience included industry leaders and former cricketer VVS Laxman.
The RBI DG noted that traditional risks such as credit, market and liquidity have become "more granular and interconnected," while new-age threats like cyberattacks, climate-related vulnerabilities, and reputational risks are rising sharply.
"The traditional risks we grew up with, such as credit, market and liquidity risk, have not gone away. In some ways, they have become more complex. Lending is more granular, markets are deeper, and interconnectedness has increased," RBI DG said.
He emphasized that risk management must be "central to strategy," not a back-office activity. Boards, he said, must continually reflect on the risk culture they promote.
Further, terming the fintech-bank collaboration a good batting partnership, Swaminathan rejected the notion of a rivalry between the two sectors. Banks bring trust, compliance and risk management; fintechs bring agility and innovation. The future, he said, lies in structured partnerships that balance both strengths.
"Fintechs have entered almost every segment of financial services, from payments and small ticket credit to wealth management and cross-border remittances. Many of them have brought fresh ideas, agility and a new way of looking at customer pain points," he said.
"Banks bring something equally important. They bring trust, balance sheet strength, experience in managing risk over cycles, and deep knowledge of regulation and compliance," he said.
Despite technological advances, the RBI Deputy Governor stressed that customer expectations remain very human. He highlighted the need for simple, transparent products, quick resolution of grievances, and inclusive design accessible even to less tech-savvy users.
The measure of good service, he said, is no longer just responsiveness but "whether the issue was solved fairly and quickly."
As banks migrate to cloud and outsourced systems, Swaminathan warned that outages now affect "millions, not just a branch."
"Banks cannot simply rely on the assurance of service providers. They must understand the technology, the control environment and the concentration risk arising from many institutions relying on the same provider," he said.
With digital frauds rising, Swaminathan urged banks to strengthen fraud detection, share fraud patterns, and work closely with law enforcement.
Customers, he stressed, care less about legal fine print and more about whether the bank "stood by them in a moment of stress."
He highlighted financial literacy as essential for a safer digital ecosystem.
Weaving together all six themes, the Deputy Governor stressed that strong governance, ethical culture and people are foundational to banking resilience.
— ANI
Reader Comments
The point about customer expectations being "very human" is so true. My parents struggle with digital banking. Products need to be simple for everyone, not just the tech-savvy youth in metros. Inclusive design is key for a country like India.
Cyber fraud is a huge worry. Just last week, my friend lost money through a UPI scam. Banks need to do much more on fraud detection and customer education. Sharing fraud patterns between institutions is a good first step suggested by the DG.
The warning on cloud outages affecting millions is critical. When a major app goes down, it paralyzes small businesses and daily life. Banks absolutely must have robust backup plans and not just rely on vendor promises.
While the agenda is comprehensive, I hope the RBI also ensures its own regulations keep pace. Sometimes, the rules feel like they're from a pre-digital era and stifle the very innovation they want to promote. Strong governance needs smart regulation too.
Liked the cricket analogy with VVS Laxman in the audience! A good batting partnership is exactly what's needed. Banks provide the solid defence (trust, compliance) and fintechs can be the aggressive stroke-players (innovation). Jai Ho to Indian banking! 🇮🇳
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