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Data Localisation Policy: RBI sticks to October 15 deadline despite US' request to soften norms

  RBI's move comes a day after two US senators called on Prime Minister Narendra Modi, urging to soften India’s stance on data localisation, warning that measures requiring it represent "key trade barriers" between the two nations.

India TV News Desk Edited by: India TV News Desk New Delhi Published on: October 14, 2018 12:22 IST
 
RBI's move comes a day after two US senators called on

 

RBI's move comes a day after two US senators called on Prime Minister Narendra Modi, urging to soften India’s stance on data localisation, warning that measures requiring it represent "key trade barriers" between the two nations.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Sunday said that it will not relax the October 15 deadline  for global financial technology (fintech) companies to comply with its data localisation norms in the public interest, according to sources.

The RBI had given six months time to global payment companies to store transaction data of Indian customers within India. The RBI's data localisation norms will kick in from Monday.

RBI's move comes a day after two US senators called on Prime Minister Narendra Modi, urging to soften India’s stance on data localisation, warning that measures requiring it represent "key trade barriers" between the two nations.

In their letter, US Sentors John Cornyn and Mark Warner — co-chairs of the Senate's India caucus that comprises over 30 senators — urged India to instead adopt a "light touch" regulatory framework that would allow data to flow freely across borders.

Data localisation requires data about residents be collected, processed, and stored inside the country, often before being transferred internationally, and usually transferred only after meeting local privacy or data protection laws.

Although domestic companies have welcomed the guidelines, global companies fear increase in their expenses for creation of local servers. 

To avoid this rise in cost, global companies in recent meeting with the RBI proposed to provide mirror data instead of original data to which the central bank did not agree, the sources said.

Last week, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley met RBI Deputy Governor B P Kanungo to discuss RBI's data localisation norms. The meeting was also attended by Economic Affairs Secretary Subhash Chandra Garg, Financial Services Secretary Rajiv Kumar and IT Secretary Ajay Prakash Sawhney. 

The RBI in April said in order to ensure better monitoring of payment service operators it is important to have “unfettered supervisory access to data stored with these system providers as also with their service providers/ intermediaries/third party vendors and other entities in the payment ecosystem”. 

“All system providers shall ensure that the entire data relating to payment systems operated by them are stored in a system only in India,” it had said. 

The RBI further said data should include the full end-to-end transaction details, information collected/carried/ processed as part of the message/payment instruction. 

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