Bank Secrecy vs Transparency: Can Confidentiality Survive RTI?
Introduction
Imagine a bank that has faced years of regulatory scrutiny. Inspection reports are written, warnings are issued, and internal communications highlight risks. However, none of this information is available to depositors or the public. When the bank finally fails or needs intervention, the real question isn’t just about what went wrong, but why no one was aware of these issues earlier.
The information existed. The consequences were public. But the documents remained locked behind claims of confidentiality.
This raises the central question this article explores: does bank confidentiality survive the Right to Information, and if it does, to what extent?
Bank Secrecy
Why are banks secretive?
Bank secrecy is not an accident, nor is it rooted in sentiment. Banks deal with people’s money, identities, transactions, and financial histories. If this information were freely accessible, it would expose individuals to fraud, discrimination, and misuse. Confidentiality is therefore a functional necessity. Banking works because customers trust that their financial lives will not become public knowledge.
What do banks keep private?
Banks typically treat the following categories of information as confidential:
- customer account balances and transaction histories
- personal identity details of customers
- loan terms, credit assessments, and restructuring arrangements
- internal risk evaluations and creditworthiness analyses
This information reveals not just financial capacity, but also personal choices, vulnerabilities, and commercial strategies.
What information legitimately deserves confidentiality?
Not all bank information stands on the same footing. Personal account details, customer identities, and transaction records carry significant privacy interests. Disclosure of such information has little connection to public welfare and can cause direct harm. In these cases, confidentiality serves a legitimate purpose, protecting individual dignity and security.
Right to Information
What is RTI, and why does it exist?
The Right to Information Act, 2005, exists to ensure transparency in the functioning of public authorities. It flows from the constitutional guarantee under Article 19(1)(a), which recognises that informed citizens are essential to a functioning democracy. RTI is designed to enable the public to understand how public institutions make decisions, allocate resources, and exercise power.
How much information is the public entitled to?
RTI does not create an absolute right to access all information. The Act itself recognises exemptions, particularly where disclosure would harm privacy, confidentiality, or other protected interests. The tension lies in deciding when the public’s right to know outweighs the interest in secrecy.
This is where the distinction between public interest and public curiosity becomes important. Information that merely satisfies curiosity does not qualify. Public interest refers to information that affects public welfare, accountability, or the functioning of public institutions.
What is the RTI standard?
The Supreme Court, in C.P.I.O. Supreme Court of India v. Subhash Chandra Agarwal, has clarified that “public interest” is not rigidly defined. It operates as a balancing test. Authorities must consider:
- The purpose of the RTI Act
- the right to privacy
- the consequences of disclosure
- potential harm to third parties
- the nature of the information involved
This assessment is always case-specific.
Where Do Banks Stand Under This Standard?
Are banks public authorities?
Public sector banks are treated as public authorities under the RTI Act. They are government-controlled, publicly financed, and perform public welfare functions. This classification brings them within the RTI framework, though it does not mean that all their information automatically becomes public.
How have courts treated bank information under RTI?
Courts have rejected the idea that banks can rely on blanket confidentiality. Information cannot be denied solely because it is confidential. Section 8 of the RTI Act lists specific exemptions, and these must be strictly applied.
Confidentiality can justify non-disclosure only when it aligns with one of these exemptions and when disclosure would cause real harm. For Example, in Reserve Bank of India v. Jayantilal N. Mistry, the RBI contended that it could not disclose bank inspection reports due to a fiduciary relationship. The Supreme Court dismissed this claim, clarifying that the relationship is regulatory, as the RBI regulates for public benefit, rather than fiduciary, which would imply regulation on behalf of banks. The Court stated: “RBI has no legal duty to maximise the benefit of any public sector or private sector bank, and thus there is no relationship of ‘trust’ between them.”
When is confidentiality upheld?
Confidentiality is generally upheld where the information involves:
- personal customer data
- individual account details
- private identities with no connection to public activity
In such cases, disclosure would amount to an unwarranted invasion of privacy, and no overriding public interest is usually present.
When is disclosure compelled?
Disclosure is favoured where the information:
- promotes accountability of public officials
- relates to public expenditure or regulatory performance
- exposes wrongdoing, inefficiency, or unfairness
- contributes to informed public debate
- protects public health or safety
Importantly, the number of people seeking information is irrelevant. RTI is not democratic; information should not be released just because a large number of people are in favour of the release. What matters is whether disclosure advances public welfare.
Does motive matter?
Under Section 6(2) of the RTI Act, applicants are not required to state their reasons for seeking information. Motive cannot be used to reject an RTI request. However, motive may still be relevant when applying the public interest test, particularly in cases involving qualified exemptions or abusive requests.
Conclusion
Bank confidentiality does survive the Right to Information, but not in absolute terms. The law does not permit banks to hide behind secrecy simply because information is sensitive or inconvenient. At the same time, RTI does not compromise legitimate privacy interests or render personal financial data public property.
The balance lies in the public interest test. Where bank information relates to institutional accountability, regulatory functioning, or matters affecting public welfare, confidentiality yields. Where information concerns individual customers with no public dimension, confidentiality remains protected.
RTI does not abolish bank secrecy. It disciplines it.
If uncertainty in banking secrecy determines what the public is allowed to know, the same uncertainty shapes how businesses decide what they are allowed to do. To see how legal uncertainty becomes a tool of control rather than a flaw, read our analysis on uncertainty in competition law.





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