Tuesday 26 May 2015



                                                 INDIAN BANKING HISTORY


Banking history of India is divided into two major categories –

 Pre-Independence Banking History

 Post-Independence Banking History

Pre-Independence Banking History

  The origin of modern Banking in India dates back to the 18th century.

Banking Concept in India was brought by

  Bank of Hindustan was established in 1770 and it was the first bank at

Calcutta under European management.

 Note: It was liquidated during the period of 1829-32.

  General Bank of India was established in 1786 but failed in 1791.

  On June 2, 1806 the Bank of Calcutta was established in Calcutta. It was

the first Presidency Bank during the British Raj.

 Note: On January 2, 1809 the Bank of Calcutta renamed as the Bank of

  On 15th April, 1840 the second presidency Bank, Bank of Bombay was

  On 1 July 1843 the Bank of Madras was established in Madras, now

Chennai. It was the third Presidency Bank during the British Raj.

These Presidency banks worked as quasi central banks in India for many

  Allahabad Bank was established in 1865 and working even today. It is the

oldest Joint Stock bank in India but it was not the first thought. That

honour belongs to the Bank of Upper India, which was established in 1863

but this bank became defunct in 1913.

 Note : Allahabad Bank is the oldest Public Sector Bank in India having

branches all over India and serving the customers for the last 145 years.

 The Comptoire d’Escompte de Paris opened a branch in Calcutta in 1860.

  HSBC established itself in Bengal in 1869.

Calcutta was the most active trading port in India, mainly due to the trade of the

British Empire, and so became a banking center.

  In 1881, Oudh Commercial Bank was established at Faizabad. It was the first

bank of limited liability managed by Indians. After Independence, in 1958 this

  In 1895 Punjab National Bank was established in Lahore in Punjab province of

Undivided India. It was the first bank purely managed by Indian.

  The first Indian commercial bank which was wholly owned and managed by

Indians was Central Bank of India which was established in 1911.

 Note : Central bank of India was also called India’s First Truly Swadeshi

The Swadeshi movement inspired local businessmen and political figures to found

banks of and for the Indian community.  The period between 1906 and 1911

thousands of Banks were established in India. Many of those banks established

then have survived to the present such as Bank of India, Corporation Bank, Indian

Bank, Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank and Central Bank of India.

  At least 94 banks in India failed between 1913 and 1918 due to economic

  On 27th January, 1921 Bank of Calcutta, Bank of Madras and Bank of

Bombay were amalgamated to form Imperial Bank of India.

  In 1926 Hilton-Young Commission submitted it’s report.

 In 1934 Reserve Bank of India act was passed.

 On the recommendation of Hilton-Young Commission, on 1st April 1935

Reserve Bank of India was established.

Post-Independence Banking History

 Immediately after the Independence, the partition of India in 1947

adversely impacted the economies of Punjab and West Bengal by

paralyzing banking activities for months. With end of British rule in India

marked the end of a regime of the Laissez-faire for the Indian banking

 To streamline the functioning and activities of commercial banks the

Banking Companies Act was passed in February 1949, which was

subsequently amended to read as Banking Regulation Act, 1949. This Act

provided the legal framework for regulation of the banking system by RBI.            

The Reserve Bank of India was vested with major powers for the

supervision of banking in India as the central banking authority.

 With a view to bring commercial banks into the mainstream of economic

development with definite social obligations and objectives, the

government decided to nationalize 14 major commercial banks on 19th

The names of these banks are as under :

1. The Allahabad Bank

2. The Bank of Baroda

4. The Bank of Maharashtra

6. The Central Bank of India

9. The Indian Overseas Bank

10. The Punjab National Bank

11. The Syndicate Bank

12. The Union Bank of India

13. The United Bank of India

14. The United Commercial Bank

 As a result of nationalization, 85 percent of the banking business in terms of

deposits was brought under public control. On 15th April 1980, 6 more

private sector commercial banks (with deposits of over Rs. 200 crores) were

The names of these banks are as under :

2. The Corporation Bank

3. The New Bank of India (merged with Punjab National Bank in 1993)

4. The Oriental Bank of Commerce

5. The Punjab and SIndh Bank

Thus, 20 private sector commercial banks were nationalized and over 90

percent of banking activity in the country was brought under the public

sector and it brought down the inequalities of income and wealth and to

ensure greater social justice.

 Based on the recommendations of Narasimhan Committee (1975) report,

the Govt. of India began to establish a number of Regional Rural Banks

(RRB's) from October 1975 and onwards.

 In the year 1985, the name of United Commercial Bank was changed as

 On 19th November 2013 on the occasion of the 94th birth anniversary of

former Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, the First women Bank of India

"Bharatiya Mahila Bank" was established.
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