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RBI issues new Credit Card rules: Is it to boost or curb plastic money spending?

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) recently sent shockwaves through the credit card industry with a new set of regulations. But fear not, fellow financially-savvy citizens! This article will dissect the "why" behind the "what," helping you navigate the plastic fantastic with confidence.

RBI issues new Credit Card rules: Is it to boost or curb plastic money spending?

Wednesday March 20, 2024 , 2 min Read

The latest in its pivot to enhance consumer choice and foster competition among the credit card networks, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) unveiled new regulations that would reshape the landscape of credit card issuance. It is meant to strategically do away with entry barriers for competition and, of course, ensure that customers are at liberty to choose among the different card networks. This, therefore, marks a big departure on the part of the issuer from conventional regulatory approaches to the burgeoning credit card market.

Norms of RBI restrain card issuers from entering into any kind of 'exclusive' agreement with any card network, which formerly kept the choices for consumers limited. By mandating issuers to provide a choice of networks at the time of card issuance or renewal, RBI wants to ensure that consumers are given the benefit of competition towards better quality of service and innovation in this area. Not just this, but even across different card networks, including major players such as American Express, Diners Club, MasterCard, RuPay, and Visa, there is a widened scope for cardholders' choice.

The initiative will be part of a bigger effort toward financial inclusion and placing the customer at the center of everything, going by an acute understanding of the changing dynamics in digital finance. This augurs well for customer service, empowering consumers to choose, and provides an impetus to card networks and issuers to improve their offerings, which eventually may result in offering more innovative financial products and services.

The rules, however, exempt the card issuers with less than 10 lakh active cards and those issuing cards on their authorised networks, balancing the encouragement of competition with recognition of the operational realities of smaller issuers. This move by the RBI, scheduled to be implemented six months after the issuance of the directive, may be recalibrating the competitive landscape and possibly opening the doors for a new era of diversified, more consumer-friendly, and competitive credit card services.

Such changes, on one side, clearly indicate the commitment of the RBI to amend its regulatory framework according to the needs of an increasingly digital economy; on the other side, it points towards boosting not just spending but smart spending through plastic money. This would align consumer interest with the capabilities of financial institutions and set the stage for a credit card ecosystem that is more vibrant, competitive, and consumer-friendly in India.


Edited by Rahul Bansal