Bank levies penalty on MAB exempt minor's account
Bank levies
penalty on MAB exempted minor’s account
Concerned bank drags feet, parent take it to the banking
ombudsman, gets penalty amount reversed.
By
Debkumar Bhadra
This
amount is huge, not only because it is more than what Vijay Mallya reportedly owe
to banks (Rs 9,000 crore) or it being more than the budget allocation for
India’s first man mission to space – Gaganyaan (Rs 10,000 crore). For a country which has just taken first
step towards financial inclusion, it is unfortunate as well since this amount has
been amassed from ordinary citizens who could not afford a minimum balance in
their account.
Numerous complaints
pouring in from different quarters of the citizenry point to the enormity and exploitative conduct of banks
vis-Ã -vis levy of penal charges. One among them is my personal experience wherein SBI imposed penalty on my minor son’s
MAB exempted account for non-maintenance of MAB. But before going
to the issue let us first take a look at what the guideline says.
RBI
guideline on levying penalty
Simple reading of the guideline issued
by Reserve Bank of India (RBI) indicate when any account falls short of minimum
balance requirement, bank should notify the account holder through SMS/email or
a letter. Bank should also allow a month to restore the balance from the
notified date; if not, then penalty will be applicable.
Secondly even if customer is unable to maintain the
minimum balance, banks cannot levy charges such high that the balance in the
account turns negative. Instead, the bank could restrict the services available
to that of basic savings bank deposit account. Once the balance is restored,
then bank should convert the account back to a regular one and restore all the features
given earlier.
Also savings accounts opened under Pradhan
Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY), Small accounts, Basic
Savings Bank Deposit (BSBD), Pensioners, Minors and all social beneficiary
accounts are exempted
from MAB requirements.
Bank contradicts
Going against both the RBI and its own stated policy, SBI levied penalty on my minor son’s savings
account during two consecutive months for non-maintenance of MAB, without intimation
to any of the account holders. Had I not checked the entries the other day, am
sure, the bank would have siphoned off the deposits until balance in the
account was reduced to zero.
The
point to ponder is the account holder being a minor (8 years on that date), he
is barred by law from earning thus he cannot and hence does not have any
income. Therefore it is incomprehensible as to how a minor would pay penalty,
more so, when the account is meant to be Zero Balance opened under Pradhan
Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana, which according to the bank itself is exempted from MAB requirement.
What
is surprising is that despite a certain sum was deposited in his account then
and there to meet the minimum balance requirement, the bank still did not spare
the minor and went on to levy penalty the following month as well.
However, since guideline
was flouted and penalty already levied, all one could do is bring the matter to
the notice of the bank which I did in person as well as in writing stating the
account holder being a minor and that the account is intended to be “Zero
Balance” account opened under PMJDY, it is exempted from MAB requirement. Therefore
levy of penalty must stop and the amount that has wrongly been deducted be
reverted to the account. The officer at the desk, while accepting the wrong
promised action on my complaint, but did not act for about a year.
Bank drags feet,
customer approaches banking ombudsman
Despite the matter been
brought to the notice of the bank not once, not twice but thrice in writing and
more than twice that number of personal visits, the bank did not pay any heed
to whatever I said or wrote.
Finding the bank
dragging its feet for close to a year, I decided to knock the doors of Banking
Ombudsman. Within a week of the ombudsman finding my
complaint maintainable and accepting it, I received a SMS on my phone stating
the bank had been trying to contact me and that the manager would like me to
visit the branch. I had a sense of satisfaction. The bank which remained deaf for
close to a year, is finally trying to communicate. I could also feel the
urgency, but did not respond to the message since I had nothing more to add to
what had already been said and written.
About an hour later, a
known face knocked at the door. He was carrying the message right from the
horses’ mouth. He informed a new manager has recently joined and intends to
resolve my complaint. She tried to contact me over phone failing which the SMS
has been sent. Since there was no response from my side, the manager requested
him to personally convey the message. At this point I looked at the clock it
was 9 PM in the night.
The following Saturday
(being holiday for me), I visited the bank and met the manager. Thus the issue which
had been lingering for the past one year, after intervention of banking
ombudsman, met its logical conclusion with the entire penalty amount reverted
to my son’s account. Point is how many of us could endure such prolonged battle
or toil to correct a wrong, which he did not commit? Well when it comes to
one’s children, every parent would love to do so. So did I.
Regulator need to intervene
The amount collected by
banks on account of MAB penalty in the last three years is not a small amount. Moreover
this has been amassed appropriating savings of that strata of the society who are
not in a position to afford a paltry deposit in their accounts. Even MAB
exempted accounts including that of minors are not spared. Therefore the government
specifically banking regulator, need to take cognizance of the issue and put in
place suitable mechanism to end the exploitative levy of charges by banks. In no
case banks must siphon off deposits from customers account and reduce it to
zero.
Remain
alert, avoid penalties
Many salaried people hold multiple accounts and as they
change jobs or shift to new cities, one or the other account becomes
inoperative. In such cases, banks may convert zero balance salary accounts into
regular savings accounts after a couple of months, as there are no salary
credits. So, we need to remain alert and maintain a minimum average balance in such
non-salary savings accounts. It is better to close such accounts. Make sure
EMIs and investments are linked to accounts that are regularly used and
maintain minimum balance. Also, make use of net banking facility to periodically
check the entries carefully and ensure balance is adequate to meet the bank’s
requirements.
Word
of caution
Keep your bank details secured. Never share account
number, card number, ATM pin, OTP, CVV, Expiry date or any other detail with
anyone, however genuine they may appear. Tell yourself and to other family
members including children to never respond to unsolicited phone calls or SMS’s
seeking bank details.


Comments
Thanks Ma'am for your encouraging words. I hope the banking regulator will take cognisance of the issue and save the poor from the jaws of sharks.