The study by Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative over the period of two years has revealed that fewer citizens are seeking information from these banks through the RTI route.
The findings suggest that despite the reduction in the number of requests, most of the banks are rejecting more and more RTI applications than before.
"So by no stretch of imagination can it be said that the governance and the competitiveness of public sector banks is constrained by the RTI Act. Whether these trends are persisting can be ascertained only when the RTI data and bank statistics are published for the year 2013-14," Venkatesh Nayak, the lead analyst, said.
The voluntary group analysed data for 2011-12 and 2012-13 submitted by the public sector banks to the Central Information Commission in their annual reports for the compliance of the RTI Act.
"The average number of RTI applications per branch was the highest in Allahabad Bank, UCO Bank and Bank of Baroda at two per year in 2011-12. 50 per cent of the banks received an average of less than one RTI application per branch that year. This figure dwindled further in 2012-13 with no bank receiving even 2 RTI applications per branch," Nayak said.
"The rejection rate more than doubled in Allahabad Bank, United Bank, UCO Bank, and the Bank of Baroda in 2012-13," he said.
