Quest for Restoring Financial Stability in IndiaBeyond the headline-grabbing issues, the Indian economy is struggling to solve a critical problem: How to restore and maintain financial stability on a durable basis. In this book titled, Quest for Restoring Financial Stability in India, Former Deputy Governor of RBI, Dr. Viral V. Acharya, talks about his quest for restoring financial stability in India and offers a concrete plan for sustained improvement. Dr Acharya shares a feasible plan to address the recapitalization needs of public sector banks, offering solutions on how to improve credit allocation by credit intermediaries and establish viable and efficient capital markets. Elucidating the need-of-the-hour reforms, this book also raises several stark and unanswered questions related to the re-emergence of fiscal dominance in India, not just of monetary policy tools but also of banking regulations. It makes a persuasive case for striking the right balance between the government, centralbank, private sector and markets, in order to improve long-run growth prospects for the real economy. |
Contents
List of Figures | |
PART 1 | |
1a Figure 3 | |
PART 3 | |
1 Figure 4 2 Figure 4 3 Figure 4 4 Figure 4 5 Figure 4 6 | |
PART 2 | |
SCBs year on year | |
Creating a Public Credit Registry | |
1 Figure 6 2 | |
Incorporating the Financial Cycle in the Monetary Policy | |
PART 4 | |
Improving Monetary Policy Transmission | |
PART 5 | |
The Indian | |
PART 6 | |
Epilogue | |
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Common terms and phrases
actions activity assets balance sheets base benchmark bonds borrowing capital cent central bank corporate cost countries creating crisis crowding currency cycle debt deficit demand deposits domestic economy effective exchange expectations external factors Figure financial stability fiscal flows foreign framework funds further future G-Secs given global global financial government debt growth higher holdings impact important improve increase independence India inflation institutions interest interest rate investment investors issue lenders lending lending rates limits liquidity loans losses measures monetary policy months Notes period policy rate private sector PSBs raise ratio RBI’s recapitalization recent regulators regulatory relative remain Report reserves resolution restrictions result rise risk savings sector securities short-term shows significant Source sovereign spread stress term transmission turn yields