Quite a few years back my
wife and I had applied for a home loan. Thanks to our branch along with the
loan-sanctioning RACPC office of that metro city the process had been very
friendly and hurdles-free. The loan being sanctioned the EMIs began to be
deducted from my salary/savings account every month. The lady bank executive
concerned also took pains to explain to us that the initial EMIs would be much
higher and then from a year or so later it’d be reduced and stabilized. Of course,
the ‘systemic’ text messages/emails/even phone calls came to every month urging
me to pay on time as if the bank were blissfully unaware of the automatic
deductions!
One fateful morning,
after about three years of paying the EMIs, I found that the deduction for that
month didn’t happen. It was perplexing, for there was absolutely no intimation
to that effect. Instead of phoning the branch immediately I decided to wait for
the bank’s intimations which I was sure would come sooner than later. One text
message did come a few days later; but that only managed to worsen my
confusion.
The text message stated
that about a hundred bucks was pending in my home loan outstanding which needed
to be paid immediately, else it was going to adversely affect my credit score.
So, I logged in to my net-banking page and tried to transfer the paltry amount
to the home loan account. To my horror the payment was not accepted. I tried
again and again for days with the same adamant result. I phoned up my branch
and after a seeming eternity of endless ringing one employee told me that the
branch had no information about that and asked me to contact the RACPC office.
I couldn’t do that because I had no telephone number of the concerned officer
there. As I was out of town during that period I asked a friend of mine to go
there and inquire. The friend obliged me, but said that no officer or clerk
there could give him the required update.
So, the text messages
kept on coming month after month and I kept on failing to transfer that hundred
bucks. I was at my wit’s end. I wondered why the largest bank of India would
thus go on crying for that hundred bucks instead of simply deducting it from my
linked savings account or allowing me to transfer! Finally, not knowing what
was the best course to resort to, I decided to courier a cheque of that fateful
hundred bucks addressed to the RACPC to my friend asking him to personally hand
over that at the office. He obliged me again, but informed me that the bank
clerk refused to accept that cheque too.
Feeling sorry for my predicament
which was absolutely for no fault of mine, the friend decided to tap all his
sources in the bank and finally, someone asked him to go to a particular
officer hidden at a desk somewhere in the labyrinth of the RACPC complex. That
officer gave the monumental verdict we waited so desperately for: the said home
loan account had stopped functioning because the concerned builder failed to
complete the construction for the next phase and therefore the funds to be paid
to him had been withheld, and that we needed to close the said account if we
thought there was no hope of the housing project progressing further.
I was astounded. Why was
this simple information not conveyed to me? Why were my transfers/payments not
accepted? Why was that meagre amount not deducted from my linked savings
account? And indeed, the supposed non-payment of the ‘EMIs’ (read 100 rupees) over
the months did reduce my credit score substantially! The credit score page
still reflects those ‘lapses’ to the SBI home loan! It’s another matter that
eventually I went to the RACPC office along with my wife and friend and closed
the account permanently, and finally, the ‘debt’ of hundred bucks was cleared! It’s
also altogether a different matter that we lost our hard-earned money to the
builder who had no inclination to compensate! But the questions for SBI remain!
If these are not the rickety ancient rules or structural rigidities that refuse
to leave the digitalized system alone then what are they?
More recently, I accepted
the SBI’s offer of a pre-approved personal loan to tide over a temporary
crisis. Everything was done on my net-banking page—the amount, the tenure, the
immediate disbursement, the EMIs and the automatic deductions every month. I
was really happy with the convenience of the process and tried to forget the
previous unsavoury experience! I think I had read all the terms and conditions
associated with the loan properly and thus I was sure I couldn’t find the
clause that ‘partial pre-payment of the personal loan not allowed’, unlike most
private banks.
Therefore, one fateful
morning when I found that I had some surplus funds, I decided to pre-pay a
substantial part of the total outstanding so that I’d enjoy a reduced burden of
repayment for the remaining period. I realized my mistake right after the
transaction which was seamlessly accepted, unlike the peculiar previous
instance of the hundred bucks refused again and again and again.
Absolutely nothing
happened to the EMIs, although the outstanding amount got reduced considerably
with the tenure remaining the same! The same amount continued to be deducted from
my linked account as before. And as I feared the obvious scenario emerged
eventually.
The day came when the EMI
amount became bigger than the outstanding amount! Therefore, the monthly deductions
stopped! This time the text message said that the remaining amount needed to be
paid immediately for which a branch visit was mandatory.
My anger made me call up
one higher SBI officer I knew for a long time and let him know of the issues. The
higher officer must’ve issued some instructions to the branch manager; but instead
of helping me out the manager put a freeze on that modified deposit account
which made me realize the obvious! So, when I finally had to visit the branch
to accomplish the pending hassles I noticed a palpable stiffness in the manager’s
attitude while attending to me.
I think a revamp of the
SBI’s digital banking system to rid it of the archaic rules would help the
accountholders immensely. Thanks to the rigidities I incurred personal losses
on at least two counts: first, the erosion in my credit score; and second, the
apparent loss in my long good standing with the bank branch which would result
obviously in debarring me from the bank’s periodic beneficial offers relevant
for me. For absolutely no fault of mine!
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