This story is from July 22, 2017

Regional rural banks to offer 15,500 jobs while bigger banks shrink hiring plan

These rural banks will offer about 15,500 jobs this year, marginally higher than the number in the previous year, while vacancies in PSBs are expected to fall sharply.
Regional rural banks to offer 15,500 jobs while bigger banks shrink hiring plan
Vacancies in rural banks are also being created due to attrition, with employees aspiring to work in bigger banks leaving after the initial nurturing period.
(This story originally appeared in on Jul 22, 2017)
KOLKATA: With state-owned banks going slow on recruitment due to the financial stress emanating from bad loans, the burden of boosting hiring and restoring the sector’s reputation as one of India’s largest job creators has shifted to the less glamorous regional rural banks.
These rural banks will offer about 15,500 jobs this year, marginally higher than the number in the previous year, while vacancies in state-run banks are expected to fall sharply, according to industry officials.

State Bank of India, the country’s largest lender, will be hiring less this year because it has about 15,000 employees in excess following its merger with associate banks, Chairman Arundhati Bhattacharya said last week in Kolkata.
The regional rural banks, which provide services mainly to small and marginal farmers in villages, need a bigger workforce help fulfil the government’s agenda to broaden financial inclusion. There are 56 such rural banks in the country and they had a combined staff strength of 86,555 in March 2017, a drop from 88,196 a year earlier, even as their cumulative business grew 15% to more than Rs 6 lakh crore in 2016-17.
Vacancies in rural banks are also being created due to attrition, with employees aspiring to work in bigger banks leaving after the initial nurturing period. A majority of candidates selected for jobs in rural banks don’t even report for work and many start resigning within a quarter, said a senior official of Paschim Banga Gramin Bank.
The trend may change this year as the overall job market in India looks dull, with job losses looming in the information technology sector. Only 1.35 lakh jobs were created in 2015 in labour-intensive sectors, against 12.5 lakh in 2009, according to data compiled by the labour bureau.

The Institute of Banking Personnel Selection announces vacancies on behalf of the regional rural banks. The institute, which also conducts tests and interviews to fill these positions, will announce the recruitment plan shortly, according to officials. The notification related to state-run bank vacancies will be announced in August.
Last year, the institute notified 8,822 vacancies for probationary officers compared with 12,500 the year before. Vacancies for clerks were about 19,300 compared with 23,000 a year ago. These numbers do not include positions in some banks that mandate separate exams for candidates willing to get hired after successful completion of training.
“Large-scale hiring is required in RRBs to meet the growing needs of massive branch expansion, challenges of financial inclusion and to overcome the loss of manpower due to retirement as well as high attrition,” said A Sayeed Khan, secretary general of the All India Regional Rural Bank Employees’ Association.
Khan said the attrition rate is the highest in states such as Andhra Pradesh, where banking penetration is better than in many other states, mainly due to lack of parity in benefits and allowances with state-run bank employees. Attrition in RRBs is the lowest in the northeastern states, where the opportunities are fewer.
The IBPS conducts all-India exams for scale I and scale II officers in rural banks. For junior cadres, state-wise tests are arranged.
author
About the Author
Atmadip Ray

Journalist with two decades of experience. Primary focus is on banking and financial issues. Studied Economics at Delhi School of Economics. Other interest ranges from photography, nature to sports. Started journalism in 2000 with The Financial Express in Mumbai. Joined ET in 2005. Two time recipient of Shriram Awards for Excellence in Financial Journalism. You may follow me at twitter @atmadiprayET

End of Article
FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA