The journey of India’s banking sector since independence has seen major changes that shaped the way banks operate today. The transformation mainly happened due to two big factors: nationalisation and mergers. From the late 1960s onwards, the government began to nationalise banks to make banking more accessible to the public. This shift, including the two key nationalisation phases in 1969 and 1980, changed the ownership structure of banks and focused on supporting the economy and the people. Alongside these moves, the expansion of the State Bank of India (SBI) group and the amalgamation of smaller banks under larger public sector units became important strategies.
As the years went by, several significant mergers took place. Notable examples include the merger of Bank of Baroda with Dena and Vijaya Bank, the Punjab National Bank’s merger with other banks, and Indian Bank’s amalgamation with Allahabad Bank. These consolidations were influenced by policy reforms such as those recommended by the Narasimham Committee and the Mission Indradhanush program, both of which aimed to strengthen banks and make them more efficient. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the Government of India played a vital role in steering these changes. Today, after multiple waves of nationalisation, reform, and consolidation, the public sector banking landscape looks very different and is better positioned to support India’s growth.
The roots of modern banking in India can be traced to the late 18th century, during the British colonial period. This era saw the emergence of both European and indigenous banking institutions. Banking in India before independence evolved in three distinct phases:
These three were government-backed and served as quasi-central banks in their respective presidencies.
With the rise of Indian entrepreneurship and nationalist sentiments, several Indian-owned banks emerged:
These banks were promoted by Indian capitalists and reformers to support Indian businesses, many of which were denied credit by European banks.
By 1947, India had a mixed banking system with the Imperial Bank and a range of Indian and foreign-owned commercial banks. However, the system was fragmented, with poor penetration in rural areas and susceptibility to bank failures.
The seeds of bank nationalisation in India were sown soon after independence. In 1949, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the nation’s central bank was nationalised (i.e. brought under government ownership). This move was foundational, as RBI became the regulatory authority guiding banking policy in a country where most banks were still privately owned.
A few years later, the government turned its attention to India’s largest commercial bank of the time: the Imperial Bank of India. In 1955, under a special Act of Parliament, Imperial Bank was nationalised and rechristened as the State Bank of India (SBI. SBI thus became a state-owned banking behemoth, tasked with taking banking services to rural areas and aligning with the government’s development priorities. Following this, in 1960 the government took over several banks that were affiliates of princely states and made them subsidiaries of SBI. On July 19, 1960, seven SBI associate banks (such as State Bank of Hyderabad, State Bank of Mysore, State Bank of Patiala, State Bank of Travancore, etc.) were also brought under majority state ownership. These moves significantly expanded SBI’s reach and laid the groundwork for a state-led banking system even before the major nationalisations of private banks began.
Timeline (1949–1960):
By the late 1960s, it was felt that India’s largest commercial banks needed to serve broader national objectives rather than the interests of a few private owners. On July 19, 1969, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi launched an unprecedented wave of bank nationalisation. Through an ordinance (later legislated as an Act), 14 major private banks were nationalised overnight. These 14 banks each had deposits exceeding ₹50 crore and together controlled a majority of India’s banking assets. The decision was swift – described as a “rather hasty move” – but was driven by the aim to align banking with the country’s socialist and developmental goals.
Banks Nationalised in 1969: The table below lists the 14 banks that were taken over by the government in July 1969, along with their current status or later developments:
| Bank (Established) | Nationalised | Later Developments (if any) |
|---|---|---|
| Allahabad Bank (est. 1865) | 1969 | Merged into Indian Bank in 2020 |
| Bank of Baroda (est. 1908) | 1969 | Continues as a separate PSB; merged Dena & Vijaya in 2019 |
| Bank of India (est. 1906) | 1969 | Continues as a separate PSB (no major PSB merger) |
| Bank of Maharashtra (est. 1935) | 1969 | Continues as separate PSB |
| Canara Bank (est. 1906) | 1969 | Merged with Syndicate Bank into itself in 2020 |
| Central Bank of India (est. 1911) | 1969 | Continues as a separate PSB |
| Dena Bank (est. 1938) | 1969 | Merged into Bank of Baroda in 2019 |
| Indian Bank (est. 1907) | 1969 | Merged with Allahabad Bank into itself in 2020 |
| Indian Overseas Bank (est. 1937) | 1969 | Continues as a separate PSB |
| Punjab National Bank (est. 1894) | 1969 | Merged New Bank of India (1993) and later OBC & United Bank (2020) |
| Syndicate Bank (est. 1925) | 1969 | Merged into Canara Bank in 2020 |
| UCO Bank (est. 1943) | 1969 | Continues as a separate PSB |
| Union Bank of India (est. 1919) | 1969 | Continues as PSB; merged Andhra & Corp Bank in 2020 |
| United Bank of India (est. 1950) | 1969 | Merged into Punjab National Bank in 2020 |
The immediate impact of the 1969 nationalisation was a rapid expansion of banking into rural areas and weaker sections of society. Public sector banks opened thousands of branches in small towns and villages in the 1970s, significantly increasing financial inclusion. It also meant that by the early 1970s, 85% or more of bank deposits were in government-controlled banks, giving the state greater say in credit allocation. The confidence in the banking system improved as people felt their deposits were safer in government-owned institutions.
The first nationalisation wave left some sizable private banks still in operation through the 1970s. In April 1980, during Indira Gandhi’s return to power, the government undertook a second wave of bank nationalisation, this time targeting 6 more banks. These had deposits above ₹200 crore each, and their takeover pushed the government’s control to encompass roughly 90% of all banking business in India. After this, nearly the entire commercial banking sector (except a few small private or foreign banks) was in the public sector.
Banks Nationalised in 1980: The following six banks were nationalised in the 1980 round:
It is worth noting that after these two waves, a total of 20 commercial banks had been nationalised (14 in 1969 + 6 in 1980). Together with SBI (which was already state-owned) and its associates, this meant India had a predominantly public sector banking system for the next few decades. In fact, one of those 20 (New Bank of India) was later amalgamated, reducing the count – by the mid-1990s there were 19 nationalised banks operating.
Policy Rationale in 1980: The second nationalisation was driven by the ongoing need to extend banking deeper into rural areas and to curb the remaining concentration of banking assets. By bringing more mid-sized banks under government ownership, the state could direct an even larger share of credit to priority sectors. By 1980, the government controlled around 91% of bank deposits through public sector banks Indira Gandhi’s government explicitly stated goals of using these banks to serve development needs of the economy better – effectively making credit availability an arm of public policy.
Impact: Following 1980, the Indian banking landscape consisted of nationalised banks (now 20, later 19), SBI and its subsidiaries, a handful of private sector banks (some old family-owned banks that were left untouched), and foreign banks. The public sector banks (PSBs) saw huge branch expansion in the 1970s and 1980s under policies like the Lead Bank Scheme and priority sector lending mandates. However, they also became subject to issues like political interference in lending, rising non-performing assets (NPAs), and inefficient operations by the end of the 1980s. These side-effects would set the stage for major reforms in the 1990s.
In the aftermath of the 1969 and 1980 nationalisations, public sector banks came to dominate Indian banking. They were instrumental in implementing government schemes: branch networks in rural areas grew exponentially, and programs like differential interest rates for the poor and directed lending to agriculture, small industries, and export sectors were executed through PSBs. By the end of the 1980s, PSBs accounted for over 90% of all commercial banking assets in India.
However, along with their growth came challenges. Many PSBs started accumulating high NPAs due to subsidized loans and politically driven lending that sometimes compromised credit discipline. Operational inefficiencies crept in due to lack of competition. The government’s tight control over these banks (including appointing CEOs and directing lending policies) often led to profitability and capital adequacy issues. By 1991, India faced a balance of payments crisis, and it became evident that the financial sector needed urgent reforms to become more efficient and robust.
In response to the 1991 crisis, the government introduced broad economic liberalisation. As part of this, a high-level committee chaired by M. Narasimham (a former RBI Governor) was appointed to recommend banking reforms. The Narasimham Committee I (1991) and Narasimham Committee II (1998) would profoundly influence banking policy:
Narasimham Committee I (1991): Recommended a restructured banking hierarchy with 3–4 large banks at the top, reducing statutory pre-emptions (like Cash Reserve Ratio and Statutory Liquidity Ratio) to free up funds, introducing prudential norms, and allowing entry of new private banks. It aimed to make banks more competitive and market-driven.
Narasimham Committee II (1998): This report explicitly pushed for consolidation of public sector banks. It envisioned a tiered system with “3 or 4 major banks with global presence, 8–10 national banks, and many regional banks”. The committee favoured mergers to build size and strength, noting that India needed a few “world-size banks” as the economy grew. However, it cautioned against merging strong banks with weak banks, suggesting weaker ones be allowed to either merge amongst themselves or be closed if unsalvageable. The committee also recommended reducing government ownership in banks and eliminating the RBI’s role as a bank owner (since RBI at that time still held stake in SBI and had one in NHB). These ideas were ahead of their time – while full privatisation did not occur, they set the intellectual framework for later consolidation.
The late 1990s also saw one notable consolidation: in 1993, the failing New Bank of India was merged into Punjab National Bank. This was the first (and for a long time, only) instance of one nationalised bank being absorbed into another. It happened to protect depositors of New Bank of India and strengthen PNB. This episode foreshadowed a later pattern of stronger banks rescuing weaker ones.
Additionally, the 1990s reforms opened the door for new private banks (like ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank, etc.), which over time intensified competition for PSBs. This competition and the recommendations of expert committees kept the pressure on public banks to consolidate and become more efficient.
While broad consolidation among all nationalised banks was slow to take off in the 1990s, the State Bank of India and its associate banks followed their own path of amalgamation. SBI, being the largest and backed by the government, gradually began absorbing its subsidiaries – a process spanning decades:
By the mid-2010s, SBI’s associates – despite sharing the brand – were separate entities causing duplicated overhead. In a landmark move, in 2017 the government and SBI’s board agreed to merge all the remaining five associate banks and the relatively new Bharatiya Mahila Bank (BMB) into SBI. On April 1, 2017, SBI absorbed State Bank of Hyderabad, State Bank of Patiala, State Bank of Mysore, State Bank of Travancore, State Bank of Bikaner & Jaipur, as well as BMB. This was a mega-merger that instantly boosted SBI’s size by about 40%. With this, the iconic SBI group became a single consolidated entity. The merger catapulted SBI into the ranks of the world’s largest banks – post-merger, SBI was among the top 50 global banks and featured in the Fortune 500 list (ranked 236 in 2017).
Outcomes for SBI: The integration of associates gave SBI a truly pan-India branch network with over 24,000 branches and a gigantic customer base. It also meant cost synergies (common treasury, technology, etc.). Indeed, after the 2017 merger, SBI reported improvements like a robust increase in low-cost deposits (CASA ratio) and strong retail loan growth. The government cited these as evidence that consolidation brings benefits: for example, “CASA growth of 6.9%… strong retail loan growth of 20.5%… increased profitability” were noted post-merger. However, SBI also had to manage significant challenges like absorbing the associates’ NPAs and harmonising HR and IT systems, which it gradually addressed.
The SBI consolidation demonstrated that merging banks could create a giant capable of competing globally. It also reduced the number of public sector banks (since SBI’s subsidiaries ceased to exist). This experience perhaps emboldened policymakers to consider similar moves for other PSBs.
Entering the mid-2010s, India’s banking sector was grappling with mounting NPAs (especially in PSBs due to past lending to infrastructure projects and industry that turned sour). The government recognized that simply owning many banks wasn’t enough – they needed to be strong and well-capitalised. A series of reform measures and strategic plans were rolled out, which indirectly set the stage for mergers:
These policy moves culminated in a series of mergers from 2018 through 2020, fundamentally altering the banking landscape:
The first major non-SBI consolidation came in 2018–2019. The government decided to amalgamate Bank of Baroda (BoB) with two smaller nationalised banks – Vijaya Bank and Dena Bank. Effective April 1, 2019, Vijaya Bank and Dena Bank were merged into Bank of Baroda. This was historic as “the first three-way consolidation of banks in India”.
In August 2019, in a decisive push, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced the merger of 10 public sector banks into four entities. This “mega merger” took effect from April 1, 2020 and resulted in a significant consolidation of the sector, bringing down the count of PSBs from 18 (pre-merger) to 12. The mergers were:
These mergers were guided by the principle of “strong national presence and global reach”, aiming to form next-generation banks capable of financing larger projects and competing globally. The Finance Minister highlighted that after these mergers, 56% of all commercial banking business in India would be handled by these merged PSBs (and 82% of PSB business, considering SBI and these four).
Summary of 2019–20 Mergers:
| Merged Entity (Effective April 2020) | Constituent Banks | Approx. Business Size | Rank among PSBs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Punjab National Bank (anchor) | Oriental Bank of Commerce, United Bank of India | ₹17.5 lakh crore | 2nd largest |
| Canara Bank (anchor) | Syndicate Bank | ₹15.2 lakh crore | 4th largest |
| Union Bank of India (anchor) | Andhra Bank, Corporation Bank | ₹14.9 lakh crore | 5th largest |
| Indian Bank (anchor) | Allahabad Bank | ₹8.1 lakh crore | 7th largest |
| Bank of Baroda (anchor, merged in 2019) | Vijaya Bank, Dena Bank (2019 merger) | ~₹15.3 lakh crore (post-merger) | 3rd largest (post-2020) |
These consolidations were executed relatively swiftly. The government provided additional capital to the merged banks to support the integration. For instance, PNB received a large recapitalisation to help absorb OBC and United. The mergers also had legal backing through amalgamation schemes notified by the government and sanctioned by RBI.
Merging large banks is a complex task, and these PSB amalgamations faced several operational and human challenges:
Despite these challenges, one year on, most merged entities managed a reasonably smooth transition. By 2021–22, the technical integrations were largely complete (for example, customers of merged banks were given new IFSC codes, ATM/debit cards were gradually unified, etc.). There were no major customer service crises, indicating meticulous planning. Banks conducted numerous townhall meetings and set up helpdesks to guide customers of merging banks.
In the medium to long run, the mergers are expected to yield several benefits:
In summary, while the consolidation drive had short-term pains, it was a strategic move to create a leaner, healthier public banking system capable of supporting India’s growth ambitions.
Both the Government of India and the Reserve Bank of India have played pivotal roles – sometimes in tandem, sometimes individually – in the nationalisation and consolidation saga:
It’s important to note that historically there was a slight conflict: RBI was itself a shareholder in SBI and some state banks (as inherited from earlier laws). This was resolved in 2008 when the government took over RBI’s stake in SBI so that RBI wouldn’t regulate a bank it owned – a step consistent with Narasimham Committee II recommendations. This allowed RBI to more objectively play the regulator role in consolidation moves thereafter.
Beyond nationalisation and individual merger decisions, a number of policy reforms shaped the philosophy and execution of banking consolidation in India:
In essence, bank consolidation in India was not an isolated event but part of a continuum of financial sector reforms. The narrative shifted from “social control” in late 1960s (nationalise to direct credit) to “financial viability and efficiency” by the 1990s and 2000s (merge and reform to compete). By 2020, the idea that fewer but stronger banks are better for the economy was broadly accepted by policymakers
As of 2025, the dust has largely settled on the major consolidation phase. India now has 12 public sector banks (PSBs), down from 27 PSBs in 2017. The present list of PSBs is:
(Additionally, IDBI Bank is in a unique category: earlier a PSB, it is now majority-owned by LIC (a state-owned insurer) and classified (from 2019) as a private bank by RBI. The government/LIC are in process of fully divesting IDBI Bank, so it’s no longer counted among PSBs in the official sense.)
Current Status: The consolidated PSBs have generally stabilized by 2025. Their profitability returned as bad loans were recognized and provisioned for. Credit growth has picked up after the pandemic slowdown, and PSBs are gaining back some market share from private banks on the back of cleaner balance sheets and government support. The capital positions of most PSBs are comfortable due to capital infusions and some return to profitability (e.g., PNB and Canara turned profitable after initial merger losses).
Government and RBI Agenda 2025: The focus is now on privatisation and further efficiency. The government has indicated it eventually wants to bring down its ownership in some banks to raise resources and promote greater efficiency. Two smaller PSBs (candidates often rumored are Central Bank and Indian Overseas Bank) have been earmarked for potential privatisation. If that happens, it would be another historic turn, effectively undoing nationalisation at least for a couple of banks. Furthermore, the banks are adopting new technologies (fintech, digital banking units) as part of the government’s vision to modernize banking. The consolidation has made it easier for them to invest in such technology at scale.
Regulatory-wise, RBI has been pushing all banks (including PSBs) to strengthen governance. A recent development is the move towards a chief compliance officer and risk officer framework independent of the executive hierarchy, to ensure better risk management – lessons hard learned during the NPA crisis. The reforms from the Narasimham era to Indradhanush era have come full circle in many ways: PSBs are more autonomous and commercially oriented than before, albeit still with a significant state influence.
One of the most transformative changes in India’s banking journey has been the launch and widespread adoption of the Unified Payments Interface (UPI). Introduced in 2016 by the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) under the guidance of RBI and the Indian government, UPI has redefined the way people transact.
Public Sector Banks (PSBs) such as State Bank of India, Punjab National Bank, Union Bank of India, and Indian Bank aggressively adopted UPI technology. Through apps like BHIM, YONO, PNB One, and others, these banks provided seamless digital payment experiences.
By 2025, UPI is not only a tool for individual and merchant payments but has also become a strategic instrument for the Indian government’s digital economy push. PSBs play a critical role in this digital ecosystem, contributing significantly to UPI transaction volumes.
Indian visitors can already use UPI, via QR scans or in-app payments, in these countries:
As of July 17, 2025, 19 Indian banks enable real-time cross-border remittances to Singapore using the UPI–PayNow corridor – including Kotak, HDFC, BOB, SBI, and more
IDFC First Bank allows NRIs from 12 countries (Australia, Canada, France, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, UAE, UK, USA) to transact via UPI with their international SIMs, without needing an Indian phone number
NPCI International Payments Ltd. (NIPL) aims to expand UPI to 4–6 more countries in 2025, such as Qatar, Thailand, Malaysia, and broader Southeast Asia
| Category | Countries / Details |
|---|---|
| UPI accepted at merchants | Bhutan, Nepal, Mauritius, Sri Lanka, Singapore, UAE, France, Trinidad & Tobago |
| UPI‑PayNow remittances | Singapore via 19 Indian banks (as of July 2025) |
| NRIs using UPI (with foreign SIMs) | 12 countries (Australia, Canada, France, HK, Malaysia, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, UAE, UK, USA) |
| Planned expansion (by 2025) | Qatar, Thailand, Malaysia, parts of Southeast Asia |
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