Source: TOI
Context:
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has officially recognised the Finance Industry Development Council (FIDC) as the Self-Regulatory Organisation (SRO) for the Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFC) sector, marking a significant step toward structured self-governance, enhanced compliance, and sector-wide coordination.
About the Finance Industry Development Council (FIDC)
- Established: 2004
- Nature: A representative body for NBFCs registered with the RBI.
- Scope: FIDC primarily represents asset financing, loan, and investment NBFCs, advocating for fair practices, policy dialogue, and professional standards.
- Objective: To promote best governance practices, industry ethics, and collaborative engagement between NBFCs and regulators.
Significance of RBI Recognition
- Formal Role in Self-Regulation
- As an SRO, FIDC will now play an official supervisory and coordination role for NBFCs.
- It will help bridge communication between the RBI and NBFCs on policy, compliance, and operational matters.
- Enhanced Industry Discipline
- The SRO mechanism ensures peer accountability, encouraging members to adhere to ethical lending, transparency, and fair customer practices.
- Strengthened Regulatory Ecosystem
- Recognition of FIDC will help streamline grievance redressal, monitor market conduct, and promote capacity building across NBFCs.
- Improved Compliance Framework
- FIDC, as an SRO, will issue guidelines, best practices, and codes of conduct, ensuring consistent compliance across the NBFC sector.
What Is a Self-Regulatory Organisation (SRO)?
A Self-Regulatory Organisation (SRO) is an industry body recognised by a regulatory authority (like the RBI or SEBI) to:
- Develop and enforce standards of conduct among its members.
- Promote ethical business practices.
- Support regulators in monitoring and supervision.
- Facilitate two-way communication between industry participants and regulators.
Examples:
- AMFI (Association of Mutual Funds in India) – for mutual funds.
- FIMMDA (Fixed Income Money Market and Derivatives Association of India) – for bond and derivatives markets.
- FIDC – now, for NBFCs.
Broader Regulatory Context
- The recognition aligns with the RBI’s push for a stronger, tiered NBFC regulatory framework under the Scale-Based Regulation (SBR) structure.
- It complements the RBI’s broader strategy of risk-based supervision and market-led governance, particularly for systemically important NBFCs.





