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Organisational changes in State Bank Of India. BY: SNEHIL JAISWAL (106) PGDM, 1 st Year. Evolution. Origin- first decade of the 19 th century with establishment of the Bank of Calcutta in Calcutta on 2 June 1806.
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Organisational changes in State Bank Of India BY: SNEHIL JAISWAL (106) PGDM, 1st Year
Evolution • Origin- first decade of the 19th century with establishment of the Bank of Calcutta in Calcutta on 2 June 1806. • Presidency Banks of Bengal, Bombay and Madras with 70 branches merged in 1921, form Imperial Bank of India. • In 1951, First Five Year Plan launched, a state-partnered and state-sponsored bank was created by taking over the Imperial Bank of India.
Ctd… State Bank of India Act was passed in 1955 and it started as a bank with 480 offices, comprising branches, sub offices and three Local Head Offices inherited from the Imperial Bank.
Small Scale Industries • Playing a vital role in the development of small scale industries since 1965 • Bank has financed over 8 lakhs SSI units in the country • It has 55 specialised SSI branches, 99 branches in industrial estates
Reason for set up The State Bank of India was destined to act as the pacesetter in the concept of purposeful banking subserving the growing and diversified financial needs of planned economic development and thus lead the Indian banking system into the exciting field of national development.
Gradual change… • From merely serving financial needs and pacing towards economic development, SBI has been actively involved since 1973 in non-profit activity called Community Services Banking. • All SBI branches and administrative offices throughout the country sponsor and participate in large number of welfare activities and social causes. Our business is more than banking because we touch the lives of people anywhere in many ways. Our commitment to nation-building is complete & comprehensive.
Agriculture/Rural • Post 1961, there are 972 specialized branches which have been set up in different parts of the country exclusively for the development of agriculture through credit deployment. • Activities covered range from crop production , horticulture , plantation crops, farm mechanization, etc • There are farmers’ meet in villages to explain to farmers about various schemes offered by the bank.
ctd… • SBI has agri specialists in various disciplines to handle projects/ guide farmers in their agri ventures. • Advances are given for very small activity covering poorest of the poor to hitech activities • SBI is the leader in agri finance in the country with a portfolio of Rs. 18,000 crs in agri advances to around 50 lac farmers.
Micro finance • SBI has taken up SHG (Self help group) movement as a mission in 1976. A noble mission to reach those families who were hitherto having no access to the credit by any formal financial institution and, therefore, were depending on informal sources and moneylenders
Ctd… • As on March 2006, SBI’s branches spread throughout the length and breadth of the country have opened 6,30,067 Savings Bank account of SHGs
Initiatives and incentives • Sensitisation of staff • Special training programmes in SHGs are being conducted at 54 training centres of the Bank • Close liaison with NGOs • SHG cells • Lending to NGOs / Federations of SHGs
Ctd… • Sahayog Niwas • SBI Life- Shakti • Rural training institutes • Appreciation by Government • Samanwita
Rural Rural Banks • Sponsored 30 RRBs, operate in 102 districts of 16 States viz. Andhra Pradesh , Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Chattisgarh, Himachal Pradesh • Network of 2336 branches • 2020 of these branches (86 %) are in remote rural centers
NRIs • Special features for saving bank account • Term deposits • Car loan scheme, purchase of new passenger cars, Multi Utility Vehicles (MUVs) and SUVs • No limit for loan
International banking • Network of 67 offices/branches in 29 countries • Corporate lending, loan syndications, merchant banking, short-term financing and remittances.
Off shore banking unit (OBU) • First OBU Special Economic Zone, Andheri (East), 17th July 2003 • Raise funds in convertible foreign currency • Foreign currency accounts and with other OBUs in India • Customised loan and liability products for client benefit
ATMs • Over 8000 ATMs • State Bank ATM-cum-Debit(Cash Plus) card. No need to carry cash • Tie up with other banks • Recahrge mobiles at ATM • Pay MTNL bills • Fees of colleges • Donate to temple trusts
International ATM card • Convenience to the customers traveling overseas • Can be used as Domestic ATM-cum-Debit Card • Available at a nominal joining fee of Rs. 200/-
Internet banking • Enables its retail banking customers to operate their accounts from anywhere • Self-account funds transfer across India. • Third party transfers in the same branch • New account opening • Demand Draft requests • New Cheque-book request
Ctd… • Railway tickets booking, • Utility bill payments • LIC and other insurance premia payments, • SBI Mutual funds Investments • Credit card dues payments, • Deposit taxes • Donations to Red Cross and such other organisations
Future plans • SBI has set for itself an ambitious target of credit linking 1 million SHGs up to March 2008. • The Bank has started to leverage our vast SHG network for various services beyond credit delivery.