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NTT Data will develop a quantum credit rating algorithm using the Classic platform

dani191

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NTT Data will develop a quantum credit rating algorithm using the Classic platform
December 2, 2021

Japanese NTT Data is the sixth largest IT services company in the world. Quantum computer harness to improve credit risk management. Classic has developed a platform for writing applied algorithms for a quantum computer, suitable for any number of qubits


Classiq has announced a collaboration in quantum algorithms with Japanese IT services giant NTT Data. As part of the collaboration - which is the first to publicly disclose Classic - NTT Data will use Classic's quantum programming platform to develop dedicated quantum algorithms for performing complex credit rating calculations, as part of the advanced computing services it intends to provide to its customers in the financial world.
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NTT Data, which is controlled by the telecom giant NTT, is one of the largest companies in the world in the field of IT services for businesses and organizations. According to Granter's rating, NTT Data is the sixth largest company in terms of market share and revenue in the field of IT services. Its fiscal 2021 revenue totaled $ 20.3 billion. It specializes in areas such as digitization processes, cloud moving, business intelligence, business consulting and the like, and serves clients in a wide range of sectors, including the financial sector. Shunichi Amemiya, head of NTT Data's R&D division, said: "We are interested in applying quantum computing technologies in the field of financial engineering, and believe that the need to compute complex business models will only increase in the future."

Quantum risk management
A credit rating is a weighting performed by the lending entity to assess the risk that the borrower, whether an individual or a company, will not be able to repay. The greater the risks, the more often the lender seeks a higher interest rate or rejects the loan application. Amir Naveh, one of the company's founders and the head of the algorithm team, explained to Techtime why quantum computing capabilities are needed to calculate credit ratings. "In calculating credit ratings one has to consider many variables, similar to the pricing of financial options. Classically one has to go through a huge number of options and scenarios in order to assess the risk. Using quantum computing the process can be accelerated and precise, which can improve the financial body's risk management. "

Classic was founded in May 2020 by CEO Nir Minervi, VP of R&D Amir Naveh and Chief Technologist Yehuda Naveh. There has been a breakthrough in quantum computing, and many technology giants are building increasingly powerful quantum computers capable of performing significant tasks.

Classic recently launched the beta version of its development platform, making it available to a number of first customers, and later the company plans to open the use to dozens of other customers.

 
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A credit rating is a weighting performed by the lending entity to assess the risk that the borrower, whether an individual or a company, will not be able to repay. The greater the risks, the more often the lender seeks a higher interest rate or rejects the loan application. Amir Naveh, one of the company's founders and the head of the algorithm team, explained to Techtime why quantum computing capabilities are needed to calculate credit ratings. "In calculating credit ratings one has to consider many variables, similar to the pricing of financial options. Classically one has to go through a huge number of options and scenarios in order to assess the risk. Using quantum computing the process can be accelerated and precise, which can improve the financial body's risk management. "

A bunch of nonsense. When interest-based economics shouldn't exist and banks should exist only for the purpose of lending to an individual or group on the basis of rationality, sensibility and innovative spirit how much ever its perceived "financially risky" nature this Japanese company should really be shutting down its economics division and the Israeli company has no grounds for such a cooperation. There is no need for all these complicated calculations. Life should be made simple to the max extent allowable and this is one such proposal of mine for a simple socio-economic system.

From the Occupy Wall Street protest in 2011 :
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@fitpOsitive @Mentee @Goenitz, your comments on the OP and my comment ?
 
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A bunch of nonsense. When interest-based economics shouldn't exist and banks should exist only for the purpose of lending to an individual or group on the basis of rationality, sensibility and innovative spirit how much ever its perceived "financially risky" nature this Japanese company should really be shutting down its economics division and the Israeli company has no grounds for such a cooperation. There is no need for all these complicated calculations. Life should be made simple to the max extent allowable and this is one such proposal of mine for a simple socio-economic system.

From the Occupy Wall Street protest in 2011 :
View attachment 800144

@fitpOsitive @Mentee @Goenitz, your comments on the OP and my comment ?


Knight templars (sorcerers ) role in establishing the modern banking have been proven by many academics hence they, their offshoots and people intentionally collaborating with them are a fair game for any govt with a conscience.


We can never establish The Kingdom of Allah Swt on earth without preserving and protecting the socio-economic dignity of the believers in specific and humanity in general . The legalism about rituals had long been discussed to death by the early scholars from all school of thoughts so we better concentrate on spirit of the Devine Law and take these bastard kids of history head on for theyve corrupted every nation before us .


@jamahir none of the aforementioned ideals could be achieved without our Lord's guidance and grace
 
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So basically it is a program that can calculate a person/company lending capacity. I mean it still needs human input!!
I wd like to see an algorithm/program that can monitor stock exchange and news and do automatic trading.
A credit rating is a weighting performed by the lending entity to assess the risk that the borrower, whether an individual or a company, will not be able to repay. The greater the risks, the more often the lender seeks a higher interest rate or rejects the loan application. Amir Naveh, one of the company's founders and the head of the algorithm team, explained to Techtime why quantum computing capabilities are needed to calculate credit ratings.

@jamahir
Interest is a curse but lenders need profit despite their conciousness and morality. The money has too much attraction for a human. Mainly forced intervention can make them to distribute it.
 
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@jamahir
Interest is a curse but lenders need profit despite their conciousness and morality. The money has too much attraction for a human. Mainly forced intervention can make them to distribute it.

AFAIK the Islamic way in case of a business needing loan has been for the lender to take up an equitable temporary or permanent partnership in the business. In modern times, towards an even more progressive path which I wrote in my socio-economic system proposal, the single, system-managed bank will lend to a business or an individual at zero interest. The purpose of the bank will be only to lend and maintain records of monthly loan repayments and that too in an evolved socio-economic system.
 
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FAIK the Islamic way in case of a business needing loan has been for the lender to take up an equitable temporary or permanent partnership in the business
That is the crux.. The lender needs money/currency at all cost without risk all the time. They don't partner/invest but lends money to get back money. They don't want to hold equity/collateral. For collective good, they should have empathy, conciousness, fear of God, etc
or an individual at zero interest.
They shd have at least higher return as there is always inflation. In UK, annual inflation is at 2% at least.
The purpose of the bank will be only to lend and maintain records of monthly loan repayments and that too in an evolved socio-economic system.
Will be boring and less awarding. Such system will collpased unless it is subsidized. The profit can be increased if the customers are increased. Such as you need bank financing even if you want to buy pen/toffee etc.
 
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That is the crux.. The lender needs money/currency at all cost without risk all the time. They don't partner/invest but lends money to get back money. They don't want to hold equity/collateral.

That is why :

1. The entire socio-economic system should be radically changed to as I proposed in this thread. This is a simple task.

2. Within that changed socio-economic system the only big lender in the society should be the system-managed bank. This bank's purpose should be just to lend for reasonable purposes and not to profit in a Capitalist way which anyway will not happen in my proposed system.

For collective good, they should have empathy, conciousness, fear of God, etc

Well, we will find many God-fearing people who don't have empathy and conscience and will lend at interest. :) I will illustrate this through the phenomenon of farmer suicides in India. Here farmers commit suicide not because of some fabled middle man but because they take loans for various items especially Capitalism-existing or irrational socio-economic reasons, the items may be wedding of daughter where there is jewelry purchased, dowry given and the guest list being of 300 minimum, loans for religious pilgrimages, for medical treatment / building house / education ( all these things not being for free in India ), for purchasing fertilizer, pesticide or farm equipment parts etc etc and the farmers are not able to repay the loan.

Farmers are forced to take loans on interest because unfortunately Indian economics including lending is based on interest, from private mahajans, established banks and private micro-finance companies. Often Indian farmers have small farm holdings and do not make enough to repay the loan and the loans additionally are taken on interest. Additionally the vagaries of Indian climate cycle - rain, drought, hail stones - and pest attack put more burden on the farmer. The agents of lenders come down to harass and intimidate the loan takers to the point of desperation with seeing the helplessness of the farmer. The lenders drive the farmer to suicide and the farmer being in a socio-economic culture where suicide is acceptable then commits suicide. I quote this article from 2012 which was updated in 2016. Note the underlined :
The microfinance industry pursued a path of rapid business growth in recent years; two investigations now link it to debtor suicides

First they were stripped of their utensils, furniture, mobile phones, television sets, ration cards and heirloom gold jewellery. Then, some of them drank pesticide. One woman threw herself into a pond. Another jumped into a well with her children.

Sometimes, the debt collectors watched nearby.

More than 200 poor, debt-ridden residents of Andhra Pradesh killed themselves in late 2010, according to media reports compiled by the State government. The State blamed microfinance companies which give small loans intended to lift up the very poor for fuelling a frenzy of over-indebtedness, and then pressuring borrowers so relentlessly that some took their own lives.

The companies, including market leader SKS Microfinance, denied it.

An independent investigation commissioned by the company, however, linked SKS employees to at least seven of the deaths. A second investigation commissioned by an industry umbrella group that probed the role of many microfinance companies, did not draw conclusions but pointed to SKS' involvement in two more cases that ended in suicide. Neither study has been made public.

Both reports said SKS employees had verbally harassed over-indebted borrowers, forced them to pawn valuable items, incited other borrowers to humiliate them and orchestrated sit-ins outside their homes to publicly shame them. In some cases, SKS staff physically harassed defaulters, according to the report commissioned by the company. Only in death would the debts be forgiven.

The videos and reports tell stark stories:

One woman drank pesticide and died a day after an SKS loan agent told her to prostitute her daughters to pay off her debt. She had been given Rs. 1.5 lakh in loans but only made Rs. 600 a week.

Another SKS debt collector told a delinquent borrower to drown herself in a pond if she wanted her loan waived. The next day, she did.
She left behind four children.

One agent blocked a woman from bringing her young son, weak with diarrhoea, to the hospital, demanding payment first. Other borrowers, who could not get any new loans until she paid, told her that if she wanted to die, they would bring her pesticide. An SKS staff member was there when she drank the poison. She survived.

An 18-year-old girl, pressured until she handed over Rs. 150 meant for a school examination fee, also drank pesticide. She left a suicide note: “Work hard and earn money. Do not take loans.”

In all these cases, the report commissioned by SKS concluded that the company's staff members were directly or indirectly responsible.

Caught in the despair of poverty, tens of thousands of impoverished Indians kill themselves every year, often because of insurmountable debt. The supportive structure of the microfinance companies was supposed to change that.

But Davuluri Venkateswarlu, director of Glocal Research in Hyderabad, which conducted the industry-wide investigation, said in an interview that he told SKS executives there was “clear involvement of SKS personnel” in some suicides.

SKS continues to deny all responsibility for the deaths, and says it never commissioned an independent inquiry. SKS spokesman J.S. Sai, who flew to Mumbai from the company's Hyderabad headquarters to discuss the AP's findings, said the company stands by its September 2011 affidavit before the Supreme Court. In that affidavit, chief executive M.R. Rao says SKS “is neither the cause of nor responsible for any suicides in the State of Andhra Pradesh.”

The deaths came after a period of hyper-growth leading up to the company's hugely successful August 2010 initial public offering.

Originally developed as a non-profit effort to lift society's most downtrodden, microfinance has increasingly become a for-profit enterprise that serves investors as well as the poor. As India's market leader, SKS has pioneered a business model that many others hoped to emulate.

But the story of what went wrong at SKS has led current and former employees and even some major shareholders to question that strategy, and raises fundamental questions for the multibillion-dollar global microfinance industry.

Meanwhile, whistleblowers at SKS say they have been targeted for retaliation and that the company has failed to correct structural flaws that contributed to the suicides.

“At the end of it,” said Alok Prasad, chief executive of the Microfinance Institutions Network, the industry group that commissioned the Glocal report, “you come down to a handful of cases where some things went wrong. Is that indicative of the model being bad or very rapid expansion leading to a loss of control?”

Beginnings in Bangladesh

Microfinance was born in desperation. Amid the 1970s famine in Bangladesh, Muhammad Yunus began giving small loans to poor women with his own money. Despite the predictions of bankers, the women paid him back.

The core idea of Professor Yunus' Grameen Bank was the borrower group. Five women from a village determine how large a loan each member gets and act as guarantors. If even one member is delinquent, no new loans are issued. Group members apply pressure and support that has kept repayment rates near 100 per cent.

Professor Yunus' innovation won him the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006.

In 1997, Professor Yunus' acolyte, Vikram Akula, founded his own microcredit organisation, Swayam Krishi Sangham, which stands for “self-help society.” In 2005, SKS started operating as a for-profit company and Mr. Akula began chasing private investment to achieve the massive scale required to dent global poverty.

Public issue

In August 2010, SKS Microfinance, then India's largest microlender, went public. Exuberant investors oversubscribed the Rs. 1,715- crore offering by nearly 14 times. The stock surged more than 10 per cent on its first day. In celebration, the company handed out 21,000 watches to employees.

Then media reports began to surface that over-indebted borrowers were killing themselves.

In October 2010, a mob of 150 people surrounded SKS' Hyderabad headquarters, protesting the suicide of a borrower's husband. They threatened to drag the corpse inside and demanded Rs. 9.8 lakh.

It was one of dozens of deaths the Government of Andhra Pradesh blamed on aggressive tactics by microfinance companies. The police jailed microfinance employees, including dozens from SKS. Among the charges was abetment to suicide, essentially driving people to kill themselves. Authorities investigated 76 cases in which employees from SKS and other microfinance companies were blamed for driving borrowers to take their own lives. The State passed a law designed to clamp down on abuses with new restrictions on loan disbursement and collection and onerous registration requirements on the companies. Microlending in India's largest microcredit market was effectively shut down.

Charges denied

Microfinance officials fought the new law and denied the charges, accusing the State government of trying to gain traction with voters and punish companies for capturing valuable market share from state-run lending groups.

Established microlenders such as SKS said loan sharks operating under the guise of microfinance were behind the excesses. SKS and other companies asked a court to stop the arrest of their employees. The court issued a stay on new arrests. Today, no one is in jail.

In a November 2010 letter to the Union Finance Minister, Mr. Akula defended his company and included supportive articles from The Wall Street Journal and the Financial Times.

At the same time, the industry group Microfinance Institutions Network hired Glocal to investigate 44 deaths among debtors of microfinance companies, including SKS.

Mr. Venkateswarlu, the Glocal director, presented the findings to executives at three lenders. In January 2011, he delivered startling news to Mr. Akula and Mr. Rao — SKS employees had clear involvement in the suicide of four borrowers, meaning that their actions appeared strongly linked to the subsequent deaths, according to their investigation.

The AP obtained a four-page section of the Glocal report that deals with the SKS case studies. It related the financial history of borrowers, the loans obtained, the nature of pressure or harassment for repayment, and the microfinance company involved. Mr. Venkateswarlu verified that it was indeed the material he presented to Mr. Akula and Mr. Rao.

“They said they'd look into the issue and take some appropriate action,” Mr. Venkateswarlu said.

SKS sent internal audit teams to the field. Their reports exonerated the company.

Inquiry initiated

Unable to reconcile the two sets of findings, SKS hired Guardian's Human & Civil Rights Forum and Third Eye, a private investigative agency, to do a more thorough, independent inquiry, according to Ramesh Vautrey, head of administration at SKS, who oversaw the investigation, and Rajender Khanna, the president of Guardian's.

A January 17, 2011, letter from SKS, signed and stamped by Mr. Vautrey, asked Mr. Khanna to “carry out a fact-finding enquiry on the causes of suicide and complicity of our field staffs without any prejudice,” according to a copy of the letter obtained by AP. The AP was shown invoice numbers for SKS payments to Third Eye and e-mails indicating the findings were sent to top management.

P.H. Ravikumar, who became interim chairman of the SKS board last November, said neither management nor the board had authorised an independent inquiry into borrower-deaths.

“Our enquiries from 2009 to 2011 have revealed that neither SKS nor its employees have been the cause for any of the suicides in the state of Andhra Pradesh,” the company said in a statement. The company also said SKS employees have been acquitted in two borrower suicide cases in Andhra Pradesh and that only one criminal case remains outstanding.

Mr. Khanna sent teams to speak with families of the dead, village leaders, neighbours and loan agents, videotaping the interviews. Their report said SKS employees bore direct or indirect responsibility for at least seven suicides, including two that overlapped with the Glocal findings.

The interview videos were shown to the AP by Uma Maheshwari, who said she was present during one set of recordings and visited several of the families personally. She left SKS in July.

In one video, the daughter of borrower Dhake Lakshmi Rajyam cries, gasping as she talks to an investigator in Tadepalligudem, Andhra Pradesh.

Rajyam was unable to pay off Rs. 1.18 lakh owed to eight different companies. Employees of microfinance companies, including SKS, urged other borrowers to seize the family's chairs, utensils and wardrobe and pawn them to make loan payments, her family told investigators. Unable to bear the insults and pressure of the crowd of borrowers who sat outside her home for hours to shame her, Rajyam drank pesticide on September 16, 2010, and died, the family says.

“We've lost my mother,” her daughter says. “Nobody will support us.”

The investigator's conclusions lay the blame on SKS employees, saying they failed to comply with company policies “and even basic moral rights.”


Mr. Vautrey said he sent the case studies to three top managers, including Mr. Rao. E-mails obtained by AP indicate that summary reports were e-mailed to the managers.

Mr. Rao did not respond to multiple requests from AP seeking comment.

Mr. Vautrey went to Mr. Akula's office one night and told him what they were doing was bad karma. “I don't want to be part of a team abetting suicides,” Mr. Vautrey said in an interview. “It is systemic failure. We have no right to kill anybody for our own business. Let's close down our business if we can't do it right.”

Profound shift

A profound shift in values and incentives at SKS began in 2008.

In October, Boston-based Sandstone Capital, now SKS' largest investor, made a major investment. It joined U.S. private equity firm Sequoia Capital, which funded Google and Apple and is SKS' largest shareholder, on the board of directors.

Mr. Akula, who had been chief executive in the company's early days, stepped down in December 2008 but stayed on as chairman. The company brought in new top executives from the worlds of finance and insurance.

SKS also began transferring more loans off its books, selling highly rated pools of loans to banks, which then assumed most of the associated risk of borrower default. That freed SKS to push out more and bigger loans.

In December 2009, SKS launched a massive sales drive. The “Incentives Galore” programme ran through February 2010, just one month before the company filed its IPO prospectus.

Agents won prizes worth up to 10 times their average monthly salary for signing huge numbers of new borrowers. Mr. Vautrey said he coordinated the shipment of 8,800 television sets, refrigerators, gold coins, mixers, washing machines and DVDs as rewards for more than 3,000 districts nationwide.

One loan officer signed up 273 groups in a month. Under training protocols, the ideal number of groups formed per month is 12, the maximum is 36, according to field agents and reports written by Mr. Akula.

“The focus is only on targets,” said Ramulu Sirgapur, who spent a decade at SKS before he left in December. “Even if we've given feedback, there might be recovery or repayment issues. That's OK. Just concentrate on growth.”

The result: Management had a great set of numbers to show investors as it shopped the IPO. In a month, SKS could add 400,000 borrowers and 100 branches, and train more than 1,000 new loan officers. SKS had 6.8 million borrowers and had disbursed Rs. 15,680 crore in loans. India was pimpled with SKS branches, which bloomed in nearly 100,000 villages. SKS said it was the fastest growing microfinance company in the world.

What was overlooked

But basic principles of lending were overlooked, according to interviews with current and former employees, as well as correspondence and internal PowerPoint presentations by Mr. Akula.

Six current and former SKS staffers with experience in the field told the AP they no longer had time to check a borrower's assets or follow up and make sure a loan was put to productive use. They said they were pressured to push more debt onto people than they could handle, and that the number of days devoted to borrower training was cut in half.

“You have a [borrower group], and a loan officer goes out and trains them, educates them, then they give the loan. That's the SKS I'd seen in 1999. That was the whole model on which microfinance is supposed to work. In the quest for growth, a lot of these things got neglected,” said Ankur Sarin, director of the SKS trusts, which are the fourth largest shareholder in the company and tasked with looking out for borrower interests.

As the relationships between heavily indebted borrowers and loan agents broke down, it became harder to collect. Frustrated agents began working together and going door to door to collect, rather than taking payments only in public, a company rule that had been designed to limit coercion. They began using other borrowers to pressure defaulters into repaying.

“The growth was very rapid. That growth led to some suboptimal outcomes,” said Ashish Lakhanpal, managing director of Kismet Capital, one of SKS' largest shareholders, who was on the SKS board until October 2010. “Were there lapses? Absolutely.”

While the board was concerned about fast credit growth, the company never believed it was harming borrowers, Mr. Lakhanpal said. “Mistakes were made, but I find it difficult to believe there was anything people did at a managerial level to encourage field officers to do that,” he said.

Plan that never made it

In the spring of 2011, Mr. Akula began circulating a plan to spend Rs. 49 crore to train financial counsellors, who would make sure clients were not getting into too much debt and used their loans productively, according to Mr. Sarin, Mr. Vautrey and others with firsthand knowledge of the proposal.

But the plan was never adopted. Publicly, Mr. Akula continued to deny that SKS bore any responsibility for suicides. “Whatever happened was due to external factors and was not reflective of any fundamental flaw in our model,” he told Business Today.

Privately, Mr. Akula prepared a 55-page presentation for the board that detailed the seven suicides that SKS' outside investigation had blamed on the company. The presentation showed how the pre-IPO push for growth led to a systemic breakdown, and again urged core reforms to restore training and lending discipline.

Board members received copies of Mr. Akula's presentation at a July 26, 2011, meeting, said a former employee who helped prepare the material.

The minutes of the meeting, however, make no mention of the report.

“As per my notes, this was not part of the board proceedings,” company secretary Sudershan Pallap wrote in a September 26 e-mail to Mr. Akula, who had complained of the omission.

Mr. Ravikumar, who would become interim chairman when Mr. Akula resigned, said the board was never informed that SKS employees were implicated in any suicides, and denied Mr. Akula presented any such findings to the board. “There was no presentation from Vikram Akula at that board meeting. This will be reflected in the minutes, as signed by Vikram Akula,” he said.

Mr. Ravikumar said the board reviewed reports from the Microfinance Institutions Network, but none of them implicated SKS employees.

Complaints

Mr. Akula continued to complain to the board that his presentation had been ignored. He summarised his concerns about the company's direction in e-mails, obtained by the AP, to seven board members, including Sequoia's Sumir Chadha, Sandstone's Paresh Patel and three independent directors — Mr. Ravikumar, Harvard's Tarun Khanna, and Pramod Bhasin, the former chief executive of Genpact.

Mr. Chadha, Mr. Patel and Mr. Khanna did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Mr. Ravikumar declined to comment on what he said was personal correspondence.

Mr. Bhasin said reports claiming SKS bore responsibility for borrower suicides were “unsubstantiated.” “Any issues raised to the Board at various times were fully investigated by external parties and found to be unsubstantiated or without evidence or actions were taken on them where appropriate,” he wrote in an e-mail.

Rancour within the company was intensifying. Board members felt Mr. Akula was suffering from a bad case of “founder's syndrome,” that he could not stand to share power at a company that had become too big for him to run.

Finally, on November 23, 2011, Mr. Akula resigned.

Mr. Vautrey said he was targeted, and SKS began termination proceedings against him on February 6.

Three members of his staff have been fired and have filed wrongful termination complaints.

On February 6, SKS also sold Rs. 243 crore in securitised loans. The stock price surged 10 per cent. Top executives have been on the road, hoping to raise Rs. 500 crore from international investors.

Mr. Sai, the company spokesman, said SKS has hired an ombudsman, is spending Rs. 14.7 crore to improve its customer grievance programme and has revamped training to ensure that employees comply with current regulations and do not lend to over-indebted borrowers. He said the company would like to reorganise incentives to maintain rapid growth while ensuring loan quality. Those changes have yet to be implemented, he said. -- AP
This criminal organization, SKS Microfinance, is still operating under the very appropriate name of Bharat Financial Inclusion, appropriate I say because of the extremely Capitalist nature of this country whose Hindutvadi-choice name is Bharat. I don't think any of the people associated with such Indian microfinance companies are atheists or at least irreligious. For the money greed of this company's board of directors, of its venture capitalist investors in India and America, of the inhumanity of its middle class MBA field agents who harassed the farmers to suicide and of the middle class buyers of this company's shares, these greedy, non-sensible and anti-human people became the cause of such farmer suicides in the country - 350,000+ just between 1995 and 2015 alone.

Will be boring and less awarding. Such system will collpased unless it is subsidized. The profit can be increased if the customers are increased. Such as you need bank financing even if you want to buy pen/toffee etc.

One of the desires of Communism is to abolish the money system itself which obviously will remove so many societal problems. But this cannot happen presently because there are no molecular replicators to produce objects ( a toffee, a vehicle etc ) for free. Even if such a machine becomes possible maybe its maintainers will need to be compensated in some manner. And then what about services like landscaping someone's garden which would need to be compensated ? So perhaps we will need a money system until some time but it cannot be the traditional, thousands-of-years-old money system but an evolved system which is what my proposal is.

The money system, which is part of a larger socio-economic system, should be a trivial system which should exist and not be taken that seriously. The purpose of life should be to live in harmony with each other, with the ecosystem, progress technologically and explore the universe. The purpose of life should not be dedicate oneself to gaining money and look at a progressive system as boring and less rewarding. :)

In my socio-economic system the money is just a monthly recycling amount which happens to every person who can obtain any product or service with it. In case some product won't fit in the budget of that recycling amount the person takes a loan from the single, system-managed bank and repay it monthly. This will be a similar process for a business / company wanting a loan. Since the entire socio-economic system is changed from the roots there is no need for any subsidy to a separate unit called the bank. There is no scope for an internal economic collapse of the bank.
 
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