Cooperative
Banks - Rural – Operational Excellence and Leadership
By Dinesh
K Kapila, CGM (Retd) NABARD
(written for the HPSTCB, For their souvenir, National Cooperative Conference, Sept 2025).
Maintaining a viable market share with
a sustainable profitable profile has been a challenge for rural cooperative banks (RCBs). Committees
have repeatedly stressed the subject of revival and operational viability in
coop banks, through recommendations for regulatory changes, financial
re-engineering, digitization and computerization, the SSE for digitized
services with improved credit
underwriting standards, fintech collaborations, etc.
The concept of operational excellence for RCBs must in addition transcend a pure focus
on efficiency metrics. In the cooperative context, excellence in operations is
a synergistic approach that balances the pursuit of efficiency, innovation, business
orientation and market dynamism with the foundational principles of equity,
inclusivity, and social welfare. It’s a member controlled enterprise. Achieving
excellence for these institutions implies being financially sustainable and
competitive while remaining deeply rooted in their community-oriented mission.
The drive toward operational excellence is by leveraging
modern tools and governance practices to empower RCBs to fulfill their unique
social mandate. The regulatory
or administrative structure has to lay down the parameters but resist the dependency
syndrome. Merely tinkering with the structure will not be optimal,
reorientation is a prerequisite even at the lowest tiers. The Government or
Regulators have to facilitate this drive to re-orient from within the
structure. The National Cooperative Policy
emphasizes a conducive legal and regulatory environment to promote autonomy,
transparency, and good governance. This
is the policy, the practice requires a respect for the policy, the concept and
processes.
The core issue is Good
governance, a major impediment is a fragmented
governance and regulatory framework. Flawed
governance structure leads to poor management quality and ultimately, to poor
financial performance. This dual authority creates significant coordination and
management problems, and often allows for political influence to hinder the
autonomous growth of these institutions. The absence of strong corporate
governance and professional management has been identified as a major factor
plaguing the sector. Business and Recovery along with
Transaction Costs are the key result areas and this needs to be appreciated by
the political leadership and the government. The Cooperative Department may
adopt an arms length distance and opt for a business oriented analytical approach in
reviews and in overseeing planning and strategizing.
Leadership
in a RCB is driven by a fusion of professional managers and democratically
elected representatives. These leaders are tasked with the delicate balancing
act of achieving economic performance while upholding the cooperative's core
values of social responsibility and inclusivity.
Self confidence in their
banking model through the mode of a cooperative
is required amongst the staff. On recruitment it should be clear they
work for a Bank which is a cooperative institution and not the State Government.
That divide from the State Government and its mode of functioning has to be
enforced. And the staff must understand across all hierarchies that banking is
a service and a business and carries a certain risk. Responsibility to their
members and customers in terms of financial returns, duly benchmarked, even by
targets, should be accepted.
Brand Equity has to be built
up, this is a prerequisite for any business and cooperative banks are no
exception. Cooperative Banks have to evolve as a strong favoured brand, have a
compelling logo, mission and vision, work on the perception of customers. Build
that circle of trust with the community. Be present on the visual and social
media, with local success stories. This strengthens the human resources by way
of motivation too.
The Government Departments
have tended to dominate the manpower at the leadership level in most
cooperative banks. This brings in the bureaucratic mode of functioning. Most
cooperative banks have a structure and the pay scales as in the State
Government and an equivalence in decision making and work culture. The ethos
this brings does not suit the requirements of a professional cooperative
banking culture. The staff has to be of
professionals across hierarchies and even officials on deputation should be
screened for adapting to the organizational culture and ethos. A system which
rewards achievers and encourages a drive for business needs to be
embedded. And incidentally the
frequent shifting of the CEOs and Branch Heads is a barrier in effective
working.
The
professionalization of management is non-negotiable for the future success of
RCBs. Weak corporate governance must be addressed by implementing robust
management practices. One approach, as suggested by past committees, is to
create a new organizational structure that segregates the ownership of the bank
(as a cooperative society) from its functions as a bank. The Board must have a sense of
ownership and for driving business . They require training and sensitization.
While we often get
focused on governance, we overlook inculcating a commercial orientation. A
product orientation, a process orientation, a sales cum marketing orientation,
as also a customer and competitor orientation. This is the fulcrum. The lever. We have to create this business orientation,
else initiatives such as multi purpose PACS can again face challenges in the
long term. An orientation for data, including of customer feedback, preferences, and trends is
also to be embedded. Business growth
has to be led by the internalized acceptance for the optimal use of technology.
The
reluctance to adopt new technology is not solely due to financial constraints
or the complexity of implementation; it is a deep rooted cultural and
institutional issue. It’s a "resistance to change" and a general lack
of digital literacy among both bank staff and their customer base in rural
areas.
Recruitment
and retention of skilled personnel are inconsistent. This absence of a
standardized framework and HR policies tailored for RCBs affects critical areas such as manpower
planning, training, and career progression. Some simply adopt the State
Government rules. Attracting and retaining talented young professionals is
crucial to revitalize the sector, as they bring fresh perspectives and a
readiness to embrace technology. Recruit the talent specifically sought for as per the functions and products and
train accordingly. Mix the new talent rationally with the existing manpower
specially to reduce the friction of the old guard with the new. Professionalise
Human Resources as a Service Department.
The Boards are often wary
of drilling down on market share, be it State or District level, assessing the
growth rate of varied products and services in the region / sub region and
particularly in the rural and semi urban areas versus their own achievements, or the scope and
potential for improving market share or margins. That sense of ownership and
driving a business based on the trust of members for mutual benefit is often
missing. Extensive awareness sessions
should be the norm post elections. Including for professional directors.
Hierarchy levels are to
be redefined as per the competitive scenario with a product oriented organizational
structure and a professional working culture. Introduce new products only after
a clear understanding of its commercial aspects. A multi purpose society does
not imply a menu of products and services, unless the market is there or can be
seeded.
Banking is evolving and
a multitude of Fintechs, start ups, SFBs, NBFCs and MFIs focus on rural areas
and semi urban areas for expanding their market share. This shall only be at
the cost of the cooperative credit system which has already ceded major share.. A comprehensive training roadmap is necessary to equip the
bank staff with the quantitative and technical skills required for a
digital-first environment. This includes a strong communication and change
management plan to create a conducive culture receptive to new processes and
technologies. Incentives for upgrading professional
knowledge with the Board considering professional training as an assessment
tool for career advancement could be an option.
Member Apathy is a reality. The
cooperative character of RCBs needs strengthening, evident by low attendance at AGMs and low voter turnout
for elections. The lack of active member participation can lead to a lack of
accountability and a disconnect between the leadership and the needs of its
members. The customers or rather members must be
trained and then the training reinforced on the essence of the spirit of
cooperatives, the mode of functioning, the need for active participation. DCCBs
and PACS should organise
training of members of half a day at least twice a year. On the services and business, repayments, recovery, diversification, productivity, credit, inputs,
extension and financial products. To overcome
the challenge of digital illiteracy among customers in rural areas, banks must
engage in awareness campaigns and training programs that help members
effectively use digital payment systems and other new services.
Relationship building is
the key. Often neglected. Farmers and artisans require the
comfort of a physical interaction to enable trust and mutual faith. The RCBs
and PACS are their own should be the thought by default. The
pathway, incremental, to reorient, needs a nuanced understanding of the business and the market and the need for effective policies,
cultural, human resources, commercial, marketing and financial.
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