About legal framework of e banking

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VOL 22 NO 232 REGD NO DA 1589 | Dhaka, Monday, July 06 2015

http://www.thefinancialexpress-bd.com/2015/07/06/99329

About legal framework of e-banking M. S. Siddiqui The banking sector is considered the heart of an economy, particularly in developing countries. In this digital age, the integration of banking with the information technology (IT) has benefited the consumers in many aspects like time, cost and operational efficiency. Cheque is the most widely accepted 'negotiable instrument' to settle transactions in the world. Paper cheque provides consumers and businesses critical alternative payments mechanism. Today billions of cheques are written and processed each year, and consumers and businesses remain confident and satisfied with writing cheques. However, cheque processing is experiencing a radical change as financial institutions and their customers now have new, more efficient ways to process and clear cheques. At present the only statutory law in Bangladesh relating to cheque is the Negotiable Instrument Act, 1881. Section 6 of the act defines a cheque: it is a bill of exchange drawn on a specified banker and not expressed to be payable otherwise than on demand. The bill of exchange is an instrument. On that instrument we have just write the direction to make payment of such an amount to such a person. That direction must be unconditional. If conditions are put, then it will be presumed that it is not a bill of exchange. As per the Negotiable Instrument Act, a bill of exchange is "an instrument in writing containing an unconditional order, signed by the maker, directing a certain person to pay a certain sum of money only to, or to the order of, a certain person or to the bearer of the instrument." Paper cheques are becoming obsolete day by day. Currently most e-commerce applications are based on the credit or debit card or bank card. The mobile phone transaction has also started on a limited scale. The electronic cheques are another form of electronic tokens related to someone's e-account of his bank. These are designed to accommodate many individuals and entities that might prefer to pay on credit or through some mechanism other than cash. A buyer sends a cheque to the seller for a certain amount of money. These cheques may be sent using mail or other transport methods. When deposited, the cheque authorises the transfer of account balances from the account against which the cheque was drawn to the account to which the cheque was deposited. The country's payment system is now operated in Bangladesh by the regulations, circulars and guidelines of the Bangladesh Bank (BB). The payment system has entered a diversified zone after the introduction of the National Payment Switch and Bangladesh Automated Clearing


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