The launch of the first all-women bank in India is a significant move by the current government (upcoming election considerations notwithstanding). Bharatiya Mahila Bank, India’s newest public sector bank, with a 1,000 crore initial budget under the Plan during 2013-14. According to an article on the bank’s site, the finance minister, P Chidambaram said:

“The idea is to empower women in the country and bring banking services at their doorstep. The bank will take initiatives to open accounts of women not only through branches but by organising camps all across the country,”

The women’s bank will support and coordinate with self-help groups and other organisations to promote lending to women. It will also tie up with existing state-run financial institutions to provide other services such as insurance and pension products.

In a recent interview with the Chair-woman of the bank, Usha Ananthasubramanian, said in response to the question, how will this bank be different from other banks?

We must appreciate the fact that women are underutilized as an economic asset and so there is a lot of untapped potential. We need to engage women economically. This bank’s approach will be to inspire people with entrepreneurial skills. We will tie up with NGOs. We will also locally mobilize women to train them in vocations like toy-making or driving tractors or mobile repairs. We will try to reach deeper rural pockets.

Ms. Ananthasubramanian echoes Angel Gurría, the secretary-general of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, in a 2013 April study published in the Harvard Business Review “Women are the most underutilized economic asset in the world’s economy”. The study place India firmly at the starting gate, where countries have made no systemic efforts to improve the economic position of women by, say, raising female literacy and education rates in the chart below.

Matrix courtesy Booz & Company

The hopes and promises are high from the Bharatiya Mahila Bank (BMB), which is one of the very few all-women banks. Some others are: Mann Deshi Mahila Sahakari Bank (Mann Deshi Bank) in Maharashtra, Konoklota Women Urban Cooperative Bank in Assam, Shri Mahila SEWA Sahkari Bank Ltd in Ahmedabad. None of these other banks received as much fan fare as the BMB will receive in the coming months. The hopes however are just as greater of this new bank. These other smaller, self starter bank models have shown that women do benefit but taking it to scale to and making sure that its operations are truly centered on women – well only time will tell. The proof will be in the pudding, whether engaging women economically will mean economic empowerment for women or purely about getting to deeper rural pockets as Ms. Ananthasubraminam says.

 

 

being-belongingThis post is my attempt to put down some thoughts that I can revisit at some point later in my journey to decipher where I belong and in the process who I am. I have always thought who I am at any time is most often correlated with where I think I belong. May be that is the problem 🙂 Given that my sense of belonging is of course dependent on the status within the social practices of what I consider my community. Does that make being and belonging ever changing for me? Yes! Change is good? Not sure. In my professional life change is what I strive to bring about and the hope is that it is for the better for all concerned. In personal life this constant need to belong is something I have found very tiring and sometimes futile – partly because my belonging, I have found, is co-dependent on other people accepting my understanding of belonging to/with them, which makes it futile if only I want to belong and they don’t see me belonging there. Perception does make me think that changing is not always good. Though the urge to belong is never ending.

In my quest to belong I am actively participating. This to my mind is my sense of being. It may be to some the same as what I do makes me who I am, but am not convinced that it explains the complexity of being as opposed to just doing to belong. I find it hard to use the two (doing and being) instead of each other but find the nuances of being lost when I just consider doing. My actions are changeable but that does not mean the act of being is as changeable as the acts themselves. My acts I feel are driven more by consciousness and/or circumstances rather than any real change in my being. (I am quite sure by this point I am confusing anyone reading this, but since this is an attempt at writing down the turmoil of being and belonging for me, its OK).

So often however what one thinks of belonging is rather inconsequential when compared to what those who I think I belong with think of my belonging there. This impacts rather profoundly the sense of being and a reorganization of my sense of being. If being is a continuum what is the role of belonging in this continuum?