The Union Finance Ministry is preparing a wide-ranging HR overhaul across India’s 12 public sector banks, aimed at making transfers and promotions more transparent through automation. The reforms, spearheaded by the Department of Financial Services (DFS), are expected to affect more than 7.5 lakh employees.
At the core sits a push to cut manual intervention. The government is considering technology-driven systems to handle annual transfers via dedicated digital portals, with structured workflows and seniority-based criteria intended to make decisions visible to staff. The reform agenda also targets long-standing employee grievances: opaque transfer policies, delayed promotions and concerns about workplace culture.
Beyond transfers and promotions, the package leans into learning and leadership development. Banks may be nudged to collaborate on training, share best practices and build common capability platforms. Proposals under discussion include establishing Centres of Excellence, expanding leadership development programmes, and deepening partnerships with educational institutions.
This isn’t a standalone move. The DFS has already been tightening PSB people processes, having advised all public sector banks to complete their promotion cycles and declare results within fixed timelines after finding that the schedules varied widely across lenders. It also moved to give IBPS candidates login-based access to response sheets and answer keys from the 2026 – 27 Common Recruitment Process cycle, part of a broader transparency drive in banking recruitment.

