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Saturday, August 9, 2014

RuPay cards to replace Aadhaar in welfare scheme authentication

NEW DELHI: The finance ministry has decided to limit Aadhaar's role in its  welfare scheme payments and, instead, use ATM-enables RuPay cards for last-mile authentication to  withdraw money.

While it will continue to use Aadhaar for opening accounts and to eliminate  ghosts and duplicates from beneficiary rolls, the ministry has decided to give  RuPay ATM cards with  bank accounts being opened under to-be-announced financial inclusion drive,  Sampoorn Vittiyea Samaveshan, government officials told ET.

"We do not want that an account holder  should be restricted on a particular technology platform. By providing RuPay  powered ATM card the account holder can transact on multiple platforms," a  senior finance ministry official said on the condition of anonymity. This is a  large blow to the Unique Identification Authority of India  (UIDAI) which has, till now, regarded authentication services as one of its  principal functions.
 
Government welfare payments were seen as one of the biggest potential revenue  streams for Aadhaar. Vijay Madan, director general at UIDAI, did not respond to  an ET email about the impacts of this development as of press time. Puneet  Chopra, associate director at Lucknow-based financial inclusion think-tank  Microsave, said, "Selection of RuPay card means authentication will be PIN  based."

Several reports from field have said that online biometric authentication is not  working for manual labourers and the old. UIDAI had notified handheld device specifications all  business correspondents (BCs) need to follow. This was, however, opposed by BCs  using different technologies such as smart card-based biometrics or no  biometrics at all.

Abhishek Sinha, the founder of Eko, a mobile based banking provider, had told ET  at that time: "Different villagers might be more comfortable authenticating  their identity through a card, a phone, a fingerprint or a numeric code. The  network should be able to accommodate all those options, and leave room for  innovation."
With the latest development, Aadhaar will be used to identify bank accounts of   beneficiaries, as both bank and government databases will be seeded with the  Aadhaar number. However, once the cash flows into the Aadhaar-linked bank  account, last-mile authentication when the money is being withdrawn will be done  using the authentication systems of either the relevant bank or last-mile  service provider such as BCs or a cellphone company.

MS Sriram, visiting faculty at IIM Bangalore's Centre for Public Policy, said it  is a good idea to use Aadhaar only for seeding. "Linking bank accounts with  Aadhaar number will help the government eliminate ghosts and duplicates from  beneficiary lists," he said.

Also, rejigging India's existing ATM  network to make it Aadhaar (and biometric) ready would be expensive, experts  said. There is another reason why some banks want to retain authentication with  them — UIDAI wants charge for its authentication service.

"Cost of Aadhaar authentication  is an issue, even if the cost is kept at just 25 paise per authentication," said  Sanjay Kuberkar, founder of Adrenaline Financial Inclusion Advisors. "There is  at least one client bank of mine who is considering to use their own biometric  authentication method instead of Aadhaar because of the cost implications," he  said

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