Context:
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the Department of Financial Services (DFS) convened a meeting with banks and NBFCs to assess progress and address challenges in scaling up the Unified Lending Interface (ULI) a digital public infrastructure likened to UPI for loans.
Purpose of ULI
- ULI aims to streamline digital lending by integrating financial, non-financial, and alternative datasets into one platform.
- It enables lenders to make informed, real-time credit decisions using verified data sources like land records, property data, satellite insights, etc.
Adoption Challenges
- Integration delay: Some lenders already have proprietary technology stacks and partnerships, making ULI integration a low priority.
- Regulatory scrutiny: Initial focus on small-ticket personal loans—which came under RBI scrutiny for rising delinquencies—slowed momentum.
- Cautious lending: Reluctance in the unsecured credit segment, a key ULI use case.
- Limited use cases: Attempts in supply chain finance via ULI also failed to gain traction.
RBI Action
- RBI Deputy Governor T. Rabi Sankar and DFS Secretary M. Nagaraju are actively engaging stakeholders to identify bottlenecks.
- The goal is to enhance adoption by resolving operational, regulatory, and technical integration issues.
Way Forward
- Need to establish robust use cases beyond personal loans, such as agri-credit, MSME lending, or gold loans.
- Possible refinement in regulatory stance to balance innovation and risk control.
- Potential incentive models to encourage lenders to integrate and use ULI actively.