Regional rural banks were established under the provisions of an ordinance passed on 26 September 1975 and the RRB Act 1976 to provide sufficient banking and credit facility for agriculture and other rural sectors. As a result, five RRBs were set up on 2 October 1975 on the recommendations of the Narsimhan Committee on Rural Credit, during the tenure of
Indira Gandhi's government. The purpose was to include rural areas into the economic mainstream since around 70% of the Indian population was rural. Prathama Bank, with head office in
Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh was the first RRB. It was sponsored by
Syndicate Bank and had an authorized capital of Rs. 5 crore. The other four RRBs were Gaur Gramin Bank (sponsored by
UCO Bank), Gorakhpur Kshetriya Gramin Bank (sponsored by
State Bank of India), Haryana Kshetriya Gramin Bank (sponsored by
Punjab National Bank), and Jaipur-Nagaur Anchalik Gramin Bank (sponsored by
UCO Bank). The RRBs were owned by the central government, state government, and the sponsoring bank with 50%, 15%, and 35% shareholding respectively. == Recapitalization ==