Q.1. What is RBI-EFT System?
Ans RBI EFT is a Scheme introduced by Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to
help banks offering their customers money transfer service from account to
account of any bank branch to any other bank branch in places where EFT
services are offered.
Q.2. At how many
centres and bank branches is the EFT facility available?
Ans The EFT system presently covers all the branches of the 27 public
sector banks and 55 scheduled commercial banks at the 15 centres (viz.,
Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Bhubneshwar, Kolkata, Chandigarh, Chennai, Guwahati,
Hyderabad, Jaipur, Kanpur, Mumbai, Nagpur, New Delhi, Patna and
Thiruvananthpuram). Funds transfer is possible from any branch of these banks
at these centres to other branch of any bank at these centres both inter-city
and intra-city.
Q.3. What is the funds availability schedule for
the beneficiary?
Ans The remitting bank transmits the funds transfer message to RBI so
as to reach NCC, before the cut off time for the settlement, the receiving
bank’s account is credited by RBI at the destination centre and beneficiary
gets credit on the same day.
Q.4. How does the RBI EFT system operate?
Ans Step-1: The remitter
fills in the EFT Application form giving the particulars of the beneficiary
(city, bank, branch, beneficiary’s name, account type and account number) and
authorises the branch to remit a specified amount to the beneficiary by raising
a debit to the remitter’s account.
Step-2:
The remitting branch prepares a schedule and sends the duplicate of the EFT
application form to its Service branch for EFT data preparation. If the branch
is equipped with a computer system, data preparation can be done at the branch
level in the specified format.
Step-3:
The Service branch prepares the EFT data file by using a software package
supplied by RBI and transmits the same to the local RBI (National Clearing
Cell) to be included for the settlement.
Step-4:
The RBI at the remitting centre consolidates the files received from all banks,
sorts the transactions city-wise and prepares vouchers for debiting the
remitting banks on Day-1 itself. City-wise files are transmitted to the RBI
offices at the respective destination centres.
Step-5:
RBI at the destination centre receives the files from the originating centres,
consolidates them and sorts them bank-wise. Thereafter, bank-wise remittance
data files are transmitted to banks on Day 1 itself. Bank-wise vouchers are
prepared for crediting the receiving banks’ accounts the same day or next day.
Step-6:
On Day 1/2 morning the receiving banks at the destination centres process the
remittance files transmitted by RBI and forward credit reports to the
destination branches for crediting the beneficiaries’ accounts.
Q.5. How is this
RBI EFT System an improvement over the existing facilities?
Ans The primary modes of funds transfer at present are demand draft,
mail transfer and telegraphic transfer. The demand draft facility is paper
based. The remitter, after purchasing demand draft from a bank branch,
dispatches the same by post / courier to the beneficiary. The beneficiary, in
turn, lodges the draft to his / her bank for collection and clearing. The time
taken for completing the process is about 10 days. In the case of telegraphic
transfer, fund reaches the beneficiary either on the same day or the next; but
both the remitter and the beneficiary would have to be account holders of the
same bank. If they are customers of different banks, a good deal of paper
processing is required. On the other hand, RBI EFT system is an inter-bank
oriented system. RBI acts as an intermediary between the remitting bank and the
receiving bank and effects inter-bank funds transfer. The customers of banks
can request their respective branches to remit funds to the designated
customers irrespective of bank affiliation of the beneficiary.
Q.6. Any limit on the amount of individual
transaction?
Ans There is no value limit for individual transactions.
Q.7. What is the
procedure for acknowledgment? How would the sending branch know that the
remitted amount has been credited to the beneficiary?
Ans The receiving branch acknowledges every transaction it receives
after crediting the beneficiary’s account. The acknowledgment particulars reach
the remitting branch as an inward message on Day 3 of the EFT processing cycle.
The remitting branch will, therefore, have precise information as to when the
beneficiary’s account was credited.
Q.8. Is it necessary for all branches to install
computer system?
Ans No. It is not necessary for all branches to have computer
systems. Branches can send the remittance details to their service branch in
paper format (the copies of the EFT Application Forms submitted by the
remitting customers accompanied by a Remittance Scroll). The Service branch
will make data entry and transmit the funds transfer information electronically
to local NCC. But, if a branch has computer facility, it can transmit funds
transfer information electronically to its service branch either on a floppy or
through a network. This would minimise the data entry work at the service
branch.
Q.9. What
additional organisational structure banks would be required to create?
Ans Each participating bank has to identify a branch at the
respective centre to act as the link point for transmitting all outward
messages and receiving all inward messages. The Service Branches / Main Branches
of banks who have been coordinating the cheque-clearing work are in the best
position to discharge this role. So no additional organisational infrastructure
is required to be created.
Q.10. What about Processing charges/Service
charges?
Ans While RBI has waived its processing charges
till March 31, 2008, levy of service charges by banks is left to the discretion
of respective banks. Source:-
www.iba.org.in/faqs-rtgs-neft-ecs.doc