RBI Tightens Mis-selling Norms to Curb Aggressive Financial Sales
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has introduced stringent new regulations aimed at curbing the mis-selling of financial products and services to retail customers. These revised directions seek to hold regulated entities accountable across all distribution channels, ensuring that consumer interests are protected from aggressive and misleading sales tactics.
Shift Towards Principle-Based and Channel-Agnostic Oversight
In a significant move to modernize financial oversight, the RBI has adopted a "principle-based and channel-agnostic approach" for the advertising, marketing, and sale of financial products. This means the rules are designed to be effective regardless of whether a product is sold through a traditional bank branch, a digital platform, or via social media.
The central bank has placed the ultimate responsibility on the Regulated Entities (REs)—such as banks and Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs)—for all marketing and sales activities. This accountability applies whether the sale is conducted directly by the institution or through third-party agents, outsourced arrangements, or digital intermediaries. The new directions are scheduled to come into force on January 1, 2027.
Crackdown on Incentive-Driven Mis-selling
A core component of the new mandate is the restructuring of incentive models that often drive unethical behavior. The RBI has explicitly prohibited third parties from paying incentives to the employees of regulated entities. While the central bank clarified that REs are still permitted to pay incentives to their own employees, it warned that these internal structures must be carefully designed.
The objective is clear: ensure that incentive schemes do not encourage "aggressive sales practices" that prioritize volume over suitability. By removing the pressure of external commissions, the RBI aims to prevent employees from pushing unsuitable financial products to unsuspecting retail investors just to meet targets.
Bringing Influencers and Digital Intermediaries Under Scrutiny
Menyadari lanskap keuangan digital yang terus berkembang, RBI telah memperluas definisinya mengenai perantara untuk mencakup para pemain pemasaran modern. Influencer media sosial, afiliasi, dan Penyedia Layanan Pinjaman (LSP) yang terlibat dalam akuisisi pelanggan atau promosi produk kini akan masuk ke dalam payung regulasi yang lebih luas sebagai Agen Penjualan Langsung (DSA) dan Agen Pemasaran Langsung (DMA).
Klarifikasi ini muncul setelah adanya masukan signifikan dari para pemangku kepentingan terkait peran pemasaran digital dalam ekosistem saat ini. Dengan mengategorikan influencer dan LSP sebagai perantara, RBI memastikan bahwa fenomena "finfluencer" dan platform pinjaman digital tunduk pada standar transparansi dan perlindungan konsumen yang ketat, sama seperti agen perbankan tradisional.
Poin-Poin Penting
- Akuntabilitas Ketat: Entitas yang teregulasi kini bertanggung jawab penuh atas seluruh aktivitas pemasaran dan penjualan, termasuk yang dilakukan melalui pihak ketiga yang disubkontrakkan dan agen digital.
- Reformasi Insentif: Untuk mencegah taktik penjualan yang agresif, pembayaran insentif oleh pihak ketiga kepada karyawan bank dan NBFC dilarang keras.
- Regulasi Digital: Influencer media sosial dan Penyedia Layanan Pinjaman (LSP) kini diklasifikasikan sebagai perantara (DSA/DMA), sehingga membawa promosi digital ke bawah pengawasan regulasi formal.