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Assam Gramin Bank is no longer the operative name of the regional rural bank (RRB) serving most of the state of Assam, India. The institution traditionally referred to as Assam Gramin Bank was known as Assam Gramin Vikash Bank (AGVB), a scheduled regional rural bank with operations across the Brahmaputra and Barak valleys. Like other RRBs in India, it functioned under the framework established by the Regional Rural Banks Act, 1976, with shareholding distributed among the Government of India, the sponsor bank, and the Government of Assam.
| Key facts | |
|---|---|
| Type | Regional Rural Bank (RRB) |
| Industry | Banking, financial services |
| Area served | Assam, India |
| Regulatory framework | Regional Rural Banks Act, 1976 |
| Ownership pattern | Government of India, sponsor bank, Government of Assam |
| Regulator | Reserve Bank of India; supervised by NABARD |
Regional rural banks were created in India following the recommendations of the Narasimham Working Group (1975) and the enactment of the Regional Rural Banks Act, 1976. Their stated objective was to extend institutional credit to small and marginal farmers, agricultural labourers, artisans and small entrepreneurs in rural areas, combining the local feel of cooperative banks with the resources and discipline of commercial banks. Each RRB was sponsored by a public sector commercial bank, which contributed managerial and financial support.
In Assam, several such RRBs were established to cover different districts. Over time, the Government of India undertook successive rounds of consolidation of RRBs to improve their viability, capital base and operational efficiency. The amalgamation of the predecessor RRBs operating in Assam led to the formation of a single, larger entity covering most of the state.
The bank's branch network is spread across rural, semi-urban and urban centres of Assam, with a focus on districts in both the Brahmaputra Valley and the Barak Valley. Its core business activities are typical of an Indian RRB and include:
As a regional rural bank, the institution plays a notable role in the rural credit architecture of Assam, particularly in districts where the reach of larger commercial banks is limited. It serves as a channel for priority sector lending, agricultural finance and the implementation of central and state government welfare schemes. Together with cooperative banks and the lead bank network, it forms part of the multi-agency approach to rural finance in north-east India.