Advertisement
Besides, the Reserve Bank of India said digital lending entities and not the borrowers should pay fees or charges payable to Lending Service Providers (LSPs) in the credit intermediation process.
Issuing a detailed set of guidelines for digital lending, the RBI mentioned about concerns primarily related to unbridled engagement of third parties, mis-selling, breach of data privacy, unfair business conduct, charging of exorbitant interest rates, and unethical recovery practices.
The RBI had constituted a Working Group on ‘digital lending including lending through online platforms and mobile applications (WGDL)’ on January 13, 2021. It further said regulatory framework to support orderly growth of credit delivery through digital lending methods while mitigating the regulatory concerns has been firmed up.
Related Articles
Advertisement
The Reserve Bank’s regulatory framework is focused on the digital lending ecosystem of RBI’s Regulated Entities (REs) and the LSPs engaged by them to extend various permissible credit facilitation services.
”All loan disbursals and repayments are required to be executed only between the bank accounts of borrower and the RE without any pass-through/ pool account of the LSP or any third party,” the RBI said.
Also, any fees, charges, payable to LSPs in the credit intermediation process shall be paid directly by RE and not by the borrower, it added. It further said a standardized Key Fact Statement (KFS) must be provided to the borrower before executing the loan contract. This has been mandated to be followed by REs, their LSPs, and Digital Lending Apps (DLAs) of REs, among others.
If any complaint lodged by the borrower is not resolved by the RE within the stipulated period (currently 30 days), he/she can lodge a complaint under the Reserve Bank – Integrated Ombudsman Scheme (RB-IOS).
The RBI further said data collected by DLAs should be need-based, have clear audit trails, and only be done with the prior explicit consent of the borrower. Option may be provided for borrowers to accept or deny the consent for use of specific data, including the option to revoke previously granted consent, besides the option to delete the data collected from borrowers by DLAs/ LSPs.
RBI also said certain recommendations of the working group have been accepted in-principle, but they require further examination. Also, there are recommendations that require wider engagement with the central government and other stakeholders in view of the technical complexities, setting up of institutional mechanism,s and legislative interventions.