It is one of the major innovations in cheque
clearing after the Magnetic Ink Character Recognition (MICR) cheques introduced
in the 80s. Cheque truncation is a system between clearing and settlement of
cheques based on electronic images.
This form of clearing does not involve any
physical exchange of instrument. Bank customers would get their cheques
realised faster as local cheques are cleared almost the same day as the cheque
is presented to the clearing house, while intercity clearing happens the next
day. Besides speedy clearing of cheques, banks also have additional advantage
of reduced reconciliation and clearing frauds. It is also possible for banks to
offer innovative products and services based on CTS.
Why is it
needed:
Though MICR technology helped improve efficiency in
cheque handling, clearing is not very speedy as cheques have to be physically
transported all the way from the collecting branch of a bank to the drawee bank
branch. The CTS is more advanced and more secure. Many countries have sought to
address this issue with cheque truncation, in which the movement of the
physical instruments is curtailed at a point in the clearing cycle, beyond
which the process is completed, purely based only on the electronic data and
images of the cheques.
What has
been the international experience in this regard:
Denmark and Belgium are pioneers in CTS. They
adopted complete cheque truncation system more than two decades ago. Sweden is
the typical example for having achieved complete truncation where all the
cheques can be presented and encashed at any branch; irrespective of the bank
on which they are drawn. CTS also takes care of the needs of future electronic
transactions.
What has RBI
and banks done:
RBI has already enabled CTS to be fully functional
in New Delhi. Soon even cheque clearing in Chennai will be settled through CTS.
Banks have also taken steps to introduce appropriate technology to facilitate
this system.
What are the
salient features of CTS?
The physical cheque is truncated within the
presenting bank itself. Settlement is generated on the basis of current MICR
code line data. These images will be archived electronically and be preserved
for eight years. A centralised agency per clearing location will act as an
image warehouse for the banks.
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