"These are interesting ideas, and we will explore them in greater detail," Rajan said, delivering the D R Gadgil Memorial Lecture here this evening.
Among other things, the committee on financial inclusion headed by Mor, a former executive director with ICICI Bank, has suggested a weightage-based approach to the priority sector lending norms, which stress leveraging of strengths by a bank, and incentivising lending to the credit deprived sections and regions.
Through this approach, the committee feels a bank's maximum priority sector lending can touch the 50 per cent mark, as against the present requirement of 40 per cent.
At present, banks are given segmental targets under each category which needs to be achieved, to take the total to 40 per cent of the overall lending every year.
The Mor committee also talks of certain credit deprived areas such as the north-east, and incentivising banks to lend more there by giving greater weightage.
"The weights will be adjusted so that overall targets are met by the system," Governor Rajan explained today.
"Despite RBI's exhortations, few banks have reduced their demand for documentation - they fear that they will be held responsible if something goes wrong, no matter what the regulatory norms. The acceptance of third party KYC certification is particularly difficult," he said.
