Borrowers who miss EMIs, even due to genuine hardships like health issues, job loss, or economic downturns, often face excessive penalties, soaring interest rates, and relentless harassment from collection agencies. Instead of structured support to help them recover, lenders escalate their financial distress by increasing the debt burden, sometimes leading to an inescapable cycle of repayment struggles.
The shaming of defaulters is another cruel tactic banks and financial institutions employ. Borrowers have reported instances where recovery agents visit homes, workplaces, or even relatives’ houses, using intimidation to force repayments. In some cases, names are published publicly, tarnishing reputations and pushing individuals into deep emotional turmoil.
Credit bureaus such as CIBIL, Experian, and CRIF create long-term consequences for borrowers who default or delay payments. While credit reporting is meant to assess financial responsibility, in reality, even minor delays can permanently ruin a person’s ability to access loans in the future. The system often lacks a fair and structured rehabilitation process, forcing borrowers into financial exile.
Once a borrower is branded as a defaulter, banks shut their doors, leading to a lifetime of exclusion from financial services. This means:
Instead of offering recovery mechanisms, such as debt restructuring programs or second-chance financial solutions, the system ensures that past missteps result in permanent financial exile.
The financial ecosystem favours institutions over individuals, ensuring that banks minimize their risk at the cost of people’s livelihoods. Unlike more borrower-friendly models seen in Europe or the US, where financial missteps can be remedied over time, India’s system criminalizes financial difficulties instead of providing structured, ethical solutions.
India’s financial ecosystem is dominated by four major credit bureaus:
These bureaus collect, analyze, and assign credit scores based on borrowers’ past repayment behaviour. In theory, this system exists to assess risk for lenders, but in practice, it punishes borrowers permanently without oversight or a structured path for recovery.
The moment your credit score drops due to defaults, delays, or disputes, financial institutions blacklist you without considering the circumstances. The consequences extend far beyond loans:
This turns past financial mistakes—often caused by life’s uncertainties—into a lifelong prison sentence.
Unlike a criminal record that might allow rehabilitation over time, bad credit stays with you for years and has no guaranteed recovery path. In contrast:
Unlike developed markets where regulators oversee credit reporting fairness, India’s credit bureaus operate unchecked. There’s no structured pathway for borrowers to recover, and dispute mechanisms are often slow, ineffective, or biased toward lenders.
Our mission to challenge systemic issues in business funding and advocate for fairness is directly linked to this flawed credit ecosystem. Exposing these issues, documenting real-life cases, and proposing viable solutions will be crucial in driving meaningful change.
This is a brutal reality many borrowers in India face—one that goes beyond financial consequences and becomes a tool for public humiliation and psychological torment. Let’s break this down further.
When borrowers default on loans, banks resort to publishing possession notices in newspapers, often with the person’s name, photo, and property details. These notices are placed in leading publications to ensure maximum public exposure, turning a financial difficulty into a public spectacle.
Banks and lending institutions deploy recovery agents who use megaphones, drum beating, and direct threats outside borrowers’ homes to pressure them into repayment.
This isn’t about financial responsibility—it’s about systematic destruction of a borrower’s social standing.
Once branded as a defaulter, there’s no escape:
It’s not just economic loss. It’s forced societal exile, making it nearly impossible for individuals to recover or reintegrate.
India’s financial system places absolute power in the hands of banks and lenders, with little to no protection for borrowers. Unlike in the U.S. or Europe, where financial hardship can be managed through structured rehabilitation, Indian borrowers are:
We are trying to document unethical banking practices extensively—perhaps it’s time to take this narrative further into policy discussions, entrepreneur awareness workshops and legal activism.
Every financial transaction you make leaves a digital trace, including:
These institutions use AI-driven analytics to create detailed behavioral profiles—without explicit consent—allowing them to predict and control financial access.
Your financial behavior is analyzed to determine:
If you don’t match their “ideal” borrower profile, you could:
This data-driven judgment system doesn’t consider personal struggles like job loss, emergencies, or health issues—it purely treats you as a financial asset or liability.
Many fintech firms sell your financial profile to:
Without transparency, users have zero control over how their information is used—data that should be private is packaged and sold like a commodity.
The result? A financial system that discriminates and excludes, leading to:
Instead of financial inclusion, this system pushes many into lifelong financial insecurity, affecting their personal life, career opportunities, and social standing.
This Broken System Must Be Challenged and we are doing exactly that
The banking & Financial ecosystem, rather than offering compassion and structured recovery, treats borrowers as Willful defaulters, regardless of the circumstances that led to financial difficulties.
Lenders operate under a punitive framework, assuming every late payment or default is due to irresponsibility rather than hardship. This ignores genuine crises such as:
Unlike in developed financial markets, where borrowers have rehabilitation pathways to rebuild credit, India’s system ensures:
Lenders make no distinction between life’s unavoidable hardships and reckless financial behaviour—instead, all defaults are treated as permanent failures.
There is no standardized appeals system, meaning:
A System That Prefers Profit Over People
At its core, India’s financial structure is designed to protect lenders, not borrowers. Instead of risk-sharing models, ethical lending frameworks, or financial rehabilitation programs, it enforces punishment, exclusion, and shame.
No Bank Wants to Talk to You
A dropped credit score immediately makes you a financial outcast. Banks treat it as an irreversible stain, meaning:
What could have been a revolutionary financial inclusion tool has instead become an automated rejection system.
Once banks refuse to lend, borrowers turn to NBFCs (Non-Banking Financial Companies), but these institutions exploit desperation by charging:
Instead of offering ethical second-chance lending, NBFCs profit from the desperation of rejected borrowers.
The rise of AI-driven lending has created a system where:
What could have been a revolutionary financial inclusion tool has instead become an automated rejection system.
Even those who co-signed loans or guaranteed repayments suffer when a borrower defaults:
This system punishes entire families and business partnerships, making financial recovery impossible.
Unlike other developed financial systems, India offers no structured process for rebuilding credit. Borrowers get:
A System That Forces Borrowers into Lifelong Financial Exclusion
Once a borrower is branded as a “defaulter,” financial institutions make it nearly impossible to recover—turning a temporary financial setback into lifelong punishment.
For many borrowers, financial difficulties aren’t a choice—they stem from unforeseen crises, such as job loss, medical emergencies, or economic downturns. But instead of assistance or rehabilitation, the system destroys them further, leading to:
Rather than helping individuals rebuild, the system ensures they never recover, turning financial misfortune into permanent personal devastation.
A financial default doesn’t just affect the borrower—it destroys entire families:
Instead of structured financial relief, families are left to fend for themselves, often falling into lifelong debt traps.
Unlike other life struggles, financial setbacks come with social consequences:
A temporary hardship turns into lifelong financial exile, where people are forced into irreversible loss.
For business owners, financial difficulties aren’t just personal—they destroy enterprises, leading to:
Instead of supporting entrepreneurs through structured recovery, banks and NBFCs eliminate them from the system, ensuring their past mistakes become permanent barriers.
Once a person’s credit score drops, they are locked out of financial inclusion entirely:
A financial system designed to serve people should allow recovery and second chances—instead, it forces permanent exclusion, treating borrowers like criminals.
Rather than designing solutions that acknowledge human struggles, economic fluctuations, and unforeseen emergencies, banks, NBFCs, and credit bureaus punish borrowers indefinitely:
Instead of helping individuals overcome difficulties, the system ensures that a temporary crisis becomes a permanent life sentence.
Banks, fintech companies, and credit bureaus collect and share financial data without full transparency or consent. Borrowers’ financial behavior—including transactions, borrowing history, and spending habits—is:
This breach of privacy means that individuals no longer control their own financial identities—institutions dictate access based on a data-driven scoring system.
The treatment of defaulters goes beyond financial penalties—it becomes public humiliation:
Instead of structured financial solutions, banks shame borrowers publicly, stripping them of basic dignity—a fundamental human right.
Financial institutions enforce discriminatory barriers based on credit scores:
Credit scores override factors like skill, experience, and integrity, ensuring that those who experience financial hardship are permanently excluded—a direct violation of equal opportunity.
Despite laws intended to protect financial data, institutions operate with impunity:
In a truly ethical financial system, borrowers would have the right to protect and control their own data—but today, they have no say in how their financial profile is used.
Once someone defaults or delays payments, they are digitally blacklisted:
Instead of a system where borrowers can recover, India enforces permanent financial exile, treating people like lifelong criminals for temporary setbacks.
Banks and credit bureaus use their power unchecked, with no formal system for borrower protection:
This isn’t just financial injustice—it’s systemic control over people’s ability to build their futures, with zero accountability.
We have been extensively documenting these flaws, and our work in challenging systemic banking issues directly ties into this human rights crisis.
“India cannot call itself inclusive until it protects its borrowers from systemic abuse.”
“Justice delayed is dignity denied.”
The financial industry needs structural reform to ensure borrowers aren’t treated like criminals for facing life’s uncertainties. A fair system would:
Once a borrower is branded as a “defaulter,” financial institutions make it nearly impossible to recover—turning a temporary financial setback into lifelong punishment.
Lenders and credit bureaus operate without oversight, often making arbitrary decisions that permanently impact people’s lives. Justice requires:
Without accountability, financial institutions will continue to use unchecked power—it’s time to push for policy changes, legal actions, and borrower protections.
If banks refuse to change, entrepreneurs and advocates must create better alternatives:
The fight isn’t just about fixing banks—it’s about building new financial frameworks that empower rather than punish.
Justice for Credit Borrowers is a powerful citizens’ initiative launched by the Surya Shakthi Foundation, a NGO registered as a Non-Profit organization under the Section 8 of the Companies Act 2013 and committed to social justice, financial inclusion, and human dignity.
To learn more about our legal standing, governance, and broader activities, please visit our official NGO website: www.suryashakthi.org
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