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Indian Financial System

The document provides an overview of the Indian financial system including its key components such as financial assets, institutions, and markets. It discusses the various parts of the system including money markets, capital markets, financial instruments, and regulatory bodies. It also describes the evolution of banking in India from indigenous bankers to the modern banking system and the progress made in areas like branch expansion, credit growth, and profitability. Key reforms and recommendations to make banks more commercially viable are highlighted.

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Sujeet Khade
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
1K views23 pages

Indian Financial System

The document provides an overview of the Indian financial system including its key components such as financial assets, institutions, and markets. It discusses the various parts of the system including money markets, capital markets, financial instruments, and regulatory bodies. It also describes the evolution of banking in India from indigenous bankers to the modern banking system and the progress made in areas like branch expansion, credit growth, and profitability. Key reforms and recommendations to make banks more commercially viable are highlighted.

Uploaded by

Sujeet Khade
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 23

INDIAN FINANCIAL

SYSTEM
PRAVIN S. SATPUTE SANGITA PUND
MBA - II [FINANCE] MBA – II [FINANCE]
ROLL NO. 24 ROLL NO. 22

1
Financial System
• An institutional framework existing in a country to enable
financial transactions

• Three main parts


– Financial assets (loans, deposits, bonds, equities, etc.)
– Financial institutions (banks, mutual funds, insurance companies,
etc.)
– Financial markets (money market, capital market, forex market,
etc.)

• Regulation is another aspect of the financial system (RBI,


SEBI, IRDA, FMC)
2
Financial assets/instruments

• Enable channelizing funds from surplus units to deficit


units
• Instruments for savers

• Instruments for borrowers

• Businesses, governments too raise funds through issuing of


bonds, Treasury bills, etc.

3
Financial Markets

• Money Market- for short-term funds (less than


a year)
– Organised (Banks)
– Unorganized (money lenders, chit funds, etc.)

• Capital Market- for long-term funds


– Primary Issues Market
– Stock Market
– Bond Market
4
Organised Money Market

• Call money market


• Bill Market
– Treasury bills
– Commercial bills
• Bank loans (short-term)
• Organised money market comprises RBI, banks
(commercial and co-operative)

5
Call money market

• Is an integral part of the Indian money market


where day-to-day surplus funds (mostly of
banks) are traded.

• call money

• notice money

• term money
6
Call money market
 Call loans are generally made on a clean basis- i.e. no
collateral is required

The main function of the call money market is to


redistribute the pool of day-to-day surplus funds of banks
among other banks in temporary deficit of funds

The call market helps banks economies their cash and yet
improve their liquidity

It is a highly competitive and sensitive market

It acts as a good indicator of the liquidity position


7
Money Market Instruments

• Certificates of Deposit
• Commercial Paper
• Inter-bank participation certificates
• Inter-bank term money
• Treasury Bills
• Bill rediscounting
• Call/notice/term money

8
Indian Banking System
• Central Bank (Reserve Bank of India)
• Commercial banks (222)
• Co-operative banks
Banks can be classified as:
– Scheduled (Second Schedule of RBI Act, 1934) - 218
– Non-Scheduled - 4
• Scheduled banks can be classified as:
– Public Sector Banks (28)
– Private Sector Banks (Old and New) (27)
– Foreign Banks (29)
– Regional Rural Banks (133)

9
Indigenous bankers
• Individual bankers like Shroffs, Seths, Sahukars,
Mahajans, etc. combine trading and other business
with money lending.
• Vary in size from petty lenders to substantial shroffs
• Act as money changers and finance internal trade
through hundis (internal bills of exchange)
• Indigenous banking is usually family owned business
employing own working capital
• At one point it was estimated that IBs met about 90%
of the financial requirements of rural India

10
RBI and indigenous bankers (1)
• Methods employed by the indigenous bankers are
traditional with vernacular system of accounting.
• RBI suggested that bankers give up their trading and
commission business and switch over to the western
system of accounting.
• It also suggested that these bankers should develop
the deposit side of their business
• Ambiguous character of the hundi should stop
• Some of them should play the role of discount houses
(buy and sell bills of exchange)

11
RBI and indigenous bankers (2)
• IB should have their accounts audited by certified
chartered accountants
• Submit their accounts to RBI periodically
• As against these obligations the RBI promised to
provide them with privileges offered to commercial
banks including
– Being entitled to borrow from and rediscount bills
with RBI
• The IBs declined to accept the restrictions as well as
compensation from the RBI
• Therefore, the IBs remain out of RBI’s purview
12
Development Oriented Banking
• Historically, close association between banks and some
traditional industries- cotton textiles in the west, jute textiles
in the east
• Banking has not been mere acceptance of deposits and
lending money; included development banking
• Lead Bank Scheme- opening bank offices in all important
localities
• Providing credit for development of the district
• Mobilising savings in the district. ‘Service area approach’

13
Progress of banking in India (1)
• Nationalisation of banks in 1969: 14 banks were
nationalised
• Branch expansion: Increased from 8260 in 1969 to
71177 in 2006
• Population served per branch has come down from
64000 to 16000
• A rural branch office serves 15 to 25 villages within
a radius of 16 kms
• However, at present only 32,180 villages out of 5
lakh have been covered

14
Progress of banking in India (2)
• Deposit mobilisation:
– 1951-1971 (20 years)- 700% or 7 times
– 1971-1991 (20 years)- 3260% or 32.6 times
– 1991- 2006 (11 years)- 1100% or 11 times

• Expansion of bank credit: Growing at 20-30%


p.a. thanks to rapid growth in industrial and
agricultural output

• Development oriented banking: priority sector


lending 15
Progress of banking in India (3)
• Diversification in banking: Banking has
moved from deposit and lending to
– Merchant banking and underwriting
– Mutual funds
– Retail banking
– ATMs
– Internet banking
– Venture capital funds
– Factoring

16
Profitability of Banks(1)
• Reforms have shifted the focus of banks from
being development oriented to being
commercially viable

• Prior to reforms banks were not profitable and


in fact made losses for the following reasons:
– Declining interest income
– Increasing cost of operations

17
Profitability of Banks (2)
• Declining interest income was for the
following reasons:
– High proportion of deposits impounded for CRR
and SLR, earning relatively low interest rates
– System of directed lending
– Political interference- leading to huge NPAs

• Rising costs of operations for banks was


because of several reasons: economic and
political
18
Profitability of Banks (3)
• As per the Narasimham Committee (1991) the reasons
for rising costs of banks were:
 Uneconomic branch expansion
 Heavy recruitment of employees

 Growing indiscipline and inefficiency of staff due to trade


union activities
 Low productivity

19
Bank profitability: Suggestions
• Some suggestions made by Narasimham
Committee are:
– Set up an Asset Reconstruction Fund to take over
doubtful debts
– SLR to be reduced to 25% of total deposits
– CRR to be reduced to 3 to 5% of total deposits
– Banks to get more freedom to set minimum
lending rates
– Share of priority sector credit be reduced to 10%
from 40%

20
Suggestions (cont’d)
• All concessional rates of interest should be removed
• Banks should go for new sources of funds such as
Certificates of Deposits
• Branch expansion should be carried out strictly on
commercial principles
• Diversification of banking activities
• Almost all suggestions of the Narasimham
Committee have been accepted and implemented in a
phased manner since the onset of Reforms

21
NPA Management
• The Narasimham Committee recommendations were
made, among other things, to reduce the Non-
Performing Assets (NPAs) of banks

• To tackle this the government enacted the


Securitization and Reconstruction of Financial Assets
and Enforcement of Security Act (SARFAESI) Act,
2002

• Enabled banks to realise their dues without


intervention of courts

22
O U
K Y
A N
T H
23

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