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This Article is From Dec 31, 2020

Starting Jan. 1, Protect Against Cheque Fraud With Positive Pay

Starting Jan. 1, Protect Against Cheque Fraud With Positive Pay
A customer writes on a cheque deposit slip at a bank branch in Mumbai. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

The banking system will implement a new cheque acceptance system from the new year which aims to minimise the number of fraudulent cheque transactions in the country.

In the positive pay mechanism, customers are required to reconfirm certain specific details about large value cheques they issue, such as the date, name of the beneficiary and the amount they are paying. This will be done through regular communication channels where customers can reach out to the banks through text messages, mobile applications, internet banking or the automated teller machine to reconfirm details.

According to guidelines issued by the Reserve Bank of India in September, the system will be available to customers on a voluntary basis for transactions worth over Rs 50,000 up to Rs 5 lakh. Banks may consider making it mandatory for transactions over Rs 5 lakh, the RBI said in its guidelines.

The regulator has asked the National Payments Corporation of India to make a facility available to banks which they can link to their cheque truncation system to enable positive pay. The cheque truncation technology allows banks to verify cheque data through a scanning system for quicker clearance.

A senior banker, closely involved in the implementation of the positive pay system, said the NPCI has made the positive pay technology available for banks since 2018, however, not all banks have used it till now. Most large banks have an internal system in place where they reconfirm transaction details with the customers when the amount crosses a certain threshold.

Smaller state-run banks are yet to sign up for the service, the banker cited earlier said on the condition of anonymity. This could be because, the banker said, they don't want to commit to infrastructure cost associated with introducing the system, or they tend to not have as many fraudulent cheque transactions recorded on their systems.

On Tuesday, India's largest lender State Bank of India announced on Twitter that it will be implementing the positive pay system for cheque transactions from Jan. 1. Customers will have to reconfirm their account number, cheque number, cheque amount, cheque date, payee or beneficiary name and the nature of the cheque, in case they choose to opt for positive pay.

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