|
Next time
you go to buy a car or television in instalments, a salesman is unlikely
to tell you that it comes at a zero rate of interest. Nothing comes for
free. And the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) wants banks to tell you just
that. Last month, the RBI sent out a curt message to all banks asking
them to stop extending "zero-interest rate" loan schemes on
consumer durables as these did not tell the consumers what exactly was
the interest they were paying.
Banks adjust the discount available from the dealers of consumer goods
against the interest due, and the commission which the bank gets from
the dealers is never disclosed to the end customer. So for a Rs 3 lakh
loan on a car, you would typically pay 12 Rs 25,000 monthly instalments
in a zero-interest scheme. The dealer discount would be Rs 5,000 and the
manufacturer will match it. The percentage earned by the bank would be
7.5 per cent (much lower than its normal rates), plus the 3 per cent commission
it has to pay to the intermediary for bringing the customer to the financing
bank. For the customer an easy way of calculating the hidden costs of
this zero-interest loan is to compare the price with that on a cash down
basis. Such schemes, the RBI believes, distort the pricing mechanism of
loan products and violate the rule that the interest rate for consumer
loans should not be lower than the banks' prime lending rate.
There has been a sharp spurt of such loans in the past six months as
manufacturers tried desperately to push sales in a depressed market. Leading
the pack were a clutch of private-sector banks. Non-banking finance companies,
which have surprisingly been left out of the RBI diktat, too were active
players in this game. But now they too are desisting from such schemes.
"The heavy discounting game was helping no one and collecting invoices
from dealers and collecting the payments was a logistical nightmare,"
says a bank official.
The RBI ban is unlikely to deter dealers. They will come up with other
ways to push their sales. Either way, the consumer has little to complain
about.
-Vivek Law
Green Buys
At the Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable Development, crafts
carried labels saying "The material for this item was obtained in
a sustainable manner", giving buyers an assurance that it was not
produced through environ- mentally destructive processes, poaching, etc.
As consumers we focus mostly on price considerations, forgetting the
real (social-environmental-ethical) costs of our purchases. After the
Bhopal disaster (1984) many consumers began boycotting Union Carbide's
products (including Eveready batteries) to express condemnation of corporate
malfeasance. Cosmetics tested on animals are likewise boycotted on ethical
grounds.
Even investments are now evaluated on "eco- ethics". "Is
your cash being used to finance polluters, child labour or other exploitative
commerce?" asks an ad. Only consumer awareness can ensure environment
protection.
-Sakuntala Narasimhan

|