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RBI Grants SRO Status to Finance Industry Development Council (FIDC)

Brief Context

Context The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has officially recognised the Finance Industry Development Council (FIDC) as the Self-Regulatory Organisation (SRO) for the non-banking financial company (NBFC) sector. What are Self‑Regulatory Organisations (SROs)? The RBI’s Omnibus Framework describes an SRO as a non‑governmental organisation that is authorised by a regulator to regulate and oversee a particular industry or sector.

Source Content

Syllabus: GS3/ Economy

Context

  • The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has officially recognised the Finance Industry Development Council (FIDC) as the Self-Regulatory Organisation (SRO) for the non-banking financial company (NBFC) sector.

What are Self‑Regulatory Organisations (SROs)?

  • The RBI’s Omnibus Framework describes an SRO as a non‑governmental organisation that is authorised by a regulator to regulate and oversee a particular industry or sector.
    • SROs derive authority from membership agreements and operate within the boundaries defined by law. 
  • Eligibility: The RBI’s guidelines require an SRO to be a Section 8 not‑for‑profit company, have diversified shareholding (no entity may hold more than 10 % of capital) and maintain sufficient net worth.
  • SRO Responsibilities:
    • Draft and enforce a code of conduct covering governance, risk management, responsible lending, and customer protection.
    • Monitor compliance, undertake surveillance, and address misconduct swiftly.
    • Establish grievance redressal and dispute-resolution mechanisms.
    • Educate borrowers about lending terms, financial literacy, and conduct staff training programs.
    • Early‑warning signals: By being close to the industry, SROs can alert regulators to emerging risks or misconduct.
Non-Banking Financial Corporation (NBFCs)?
– NBFCs are companies registered under the Companies Act, 1956, engaged in financial activities such as;
1. Offering loans and advances,
2. Acquiring shares, stocks, bonds, debentures, or other marketable securities,
3. Operating deposit schemes in various formats.
– It does not include any institution whose principal business is that of agriculture activity, industrial activity, purchase or sale of any goods (other than securities) or providing any services and sale/purchase/construction of immovable property. 

Need for an SRO in the NBFC Sector

  • Rapid Growth and Sectoral Importance: NBFCs contribute nearly one-third of total lending in India and serve underserved segments like MSMEs, housing, vehicle finance, and micro-enterprises.
    • Their growing role demanded a structured mechanism to enforce discipline, standard practices, and accountability.
  • Pressure on RBI: RBI directly supervises thousands of NBFCs, creating a huge regulatory burden.
    • An SRO acts as an extended arm of the regulator, easing oversight while ensuring compliance.
  • Sector-Specific Challenges:
    • Crises and liquidity issues: IL&FS default (2018) and other asset-liability mismatches highlighted systemic vulnerabilities.
    • Governance gaps: Weak corporate governance, poor risk management, and opaque ownership structures in some NBFCs.
    • Shadow banking risks: NBFCs perform bank-like functions without being banks, posing contagion risks.
    • Heterogeneity: Diverse operations across housing, vehicle loans, gold loans, micro-lending, and infrastructure finance complicate regulatory monitoring.

Way Ahead

  • Comprehensive code of conduct: The code should cover governance, risk management, responsible lending, transparency, fair debt collection, cyber‑security, data privacy and ESG considerations.
  • Set up dedicated committees for compliance monitoring, audits and consumer complaints.
  • Promote financial literacy: Develop consumer‑education campaigns explaining NBFC products, interest rates, repayment terms and dispute resolution.

Source: BS