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Macro Economics




                    Notes          debt minus the value of capital assets of the government and loans and advances given by the
                                   government to other sectors. Debt obligation can be of many types as:
                                   Short term debts are the debt of which the maturity is less than one year at the time of issue and
                                   consist of items like the treasury bills.
                                   Some obligations may not have specific maturity but may be repayable subject to various terms
                                   and conditions they are called Floating Debt.

                                          Example: Provident funds, small savings, reserve funds and deposits.

                                   Permanent of funded debt are loans having a maturity of more than one year at the time of issue.
                                   Usually  there  maturity  is  between  three  and  thirty  years.  Some  of  them  may  even  be
                                   non-terminable so that the govt. is only to pay the interest on such debt without ever repaying
                                   the principle amount.
                                   Obligations owed to foreigners – govt. institutions, firms and individuals are called external
                                   loans.
                                   Debt obligations of the Central Government are broadly divided into two categories:
                                       Internal Debt

                                       External Debt

                                   Internal Debt

                                   This includes loans raised within the country, like:
                                   (a) Current market loans, (b) others, comprising balance of expired loans, compensation and
                                   other bonds such as National Rural Development Bonds  and Capital Investment Bonds,  (c)
                                   Special Bearer Bonds, (d) Treasury Bills, (e) Special floating and other loans, (f) Special securities
                                   issued to the RBI, (g) Small savings, (h) Provident funds, (i) other accounts, and (j) reserve funds
                                   and deposits.

                                   External Debt

                                   External debt is raised in foreign currency and a substantial part of it as it is also repayable in
                                   foreign currency. External debt represent loans raised by a country from outside sources includes
                                   debt raised by the Govt. and by the non-govt. sources such as NRI deposits, commercial borrowings
                                   from abroad, suppliers credit and short-term borrowings, etc.




                                     Did u know?  Public debt in India has grown immensely in planning period. In 1999 the
                                     total debt of central government was   8,75,925 and in 1998 debt of state government was
                                       2,84,942. In the budget of  2005-2006 the  22% of total expenditure was only  interest
                                     payment. If the debt is owned by central bank of India it increases inflation as RBI meets
                                     the growing demand by issuing additional quantity of money.

                                   Public debt plays an important role in economy. Public debt contributes to the saving effort of
                                   the economy. LDCs are usually short of capital resources. As saving capacity of the masses is
                                   very low, appropriate measures are taken to step up  rates of saving and investment in  the
                                   economy. The net effect of the borrowing also depends upon the sources from which they come:
                                   If Govt. goes of the borrowings from the market and public reduces its own consumption and
                                   lends its savings to the govt. the result will be a net increase in the rate of savings. But if loans are




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