Regulating The Unregulated: A Critical Analysis Of The Proposed Banning Of Unregulated Lending Activities Bill In India
Astha Shree PandeyJul 12, 202610.5281/zenodo.2132581519 pages
The architectural stability of India’s retail credit ecosystem has been profoundly disrupted by the intersection of smartphone ubiquity, data-driven underwriting, and regulatory arbitrage. While traditional credit delivery mechanisms—ranging from scheduled commercial banks to non-banking financial companies (NBFCs)—operate within a highly codified, risk-averse supervisory matrix managed by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), an expansive, shadow parallel economy has flourished. This shadow network comprises unregulated entities that leverage digital infrastructure to extend credit outside the perimeter of prudential oversight[1]. The proposed Banning of Unregulated Lending Activities (BULA) Bill represents the state’s ultimate legislative counter-offensive. It aims to establish an absolute statutory prohibition on any credit-extending activity that lacks the explicit imprimatur of an official regulator. However, by choosing a sweeping prohibitory mechanism rather than a nuanced regulatory or licensing framework, the draft bill risks colliding with fundamental constitutional guarantees, disrupting federal legislative competence, and aggravating the very socio-economic vulnerabilities it seeks to cure. The BULA Bill remains, at the time of writing, in draft form. The Department of Financial Services released it for stakeholder comment on 13 December 2024 and kept the initial comment window open until 13 February 2025, and it has not yet been formally introduced as a Bill in Parliament.[2] This procedural posture matters for the analysis that follows: because the text remains open to revision before formal introduction, the constitutional and federal vulnerabilities identified in this paper are not academic post-mortems on a settled statute but live drafting choices that Parliament retains a genuine opportunity to correct.