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Business Environment




                    Notes          5.6 Summary

                                       Monetary policy  is about  supply of the currency in the country, regulated by the RBI.
                                       Though the  RBI does  it in  the light of  the fiscal policy  and macro objectives  of  the
                                       government, it is in this sense that fiscal policy and monetary policy are complementary.
                                       There are various factors affecting money supply in India. Some of them are as follows:
                                       net bank credit to the bank, bank credit to the commercial sector, net foreign exchange
                                       assets of the banking sector, government currency liabilities to the public, non-monetary
                                       liabilities of the banking sector.
                                       There is a direct relationship between supply of money and inflation. As the supply of
                                       money increases, it value goes down and inflation increases. Supply of money has also an
                                       impact on the interest rate and level of investment.
                                       It is the RBI, which regulates the supply of money in India. It performs various functions
                                       as Issue of Currency, Banker to  Government role, Banker's Bank, Controller of Credit
                                       Exchange , Management and Control, Supervisory Function and Promoter of the Financial
                                       System.
                                       The RBI has various tools, which can be used to control the supply of the money in the
                                       economy. Some of them are Open Market Operations, The Bank Rate, Direct Regulation of
                                       Interest Rates, Cash Reserve Ratio, Statutory Liquidity Ratio, Direct Credit Allocation and
                                       Credit Rationing. Besides these, there are some other such as Cash Authorisation Scheme,
                                       Fixation of Inventory Norm  and Credit  Norms, Liquidity  Adjustment Facility (LAF),
                                       Moral Suasion and REPOs.

                                   5.7 Keywords


                                   Bank Rate: The bank rate, which is also known as discount rate, is the rate at which the central
                                   bank discounts advances to the commercial banks.
                                   Cash Reserve Ratio: The CRR refers to the cash that banks have to maintain with the RBI as a
                                   certain percentage of their demand and time liabilities.
                                   Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF): In LAF the amount of REPO and reverse REPO are changed
                                   on a daily basis to manage liquidity.
                                   Monetary Aggregates: These are two basic measures of money globally.
                                   Open Market Operations: The  open  market  operation  involves  the  sale  and  purchase  of
                                   government securities by the RBI.
                                   REPOs: A REPO is purchase of one loan against the sale of another.
                                   Selective Credit Control: Selective and qualitative credit control refers to regulations of credit
                                   for specific purposes or branches of economic activity.

                                   5.8 Self Assessment

                                   Fill in the blanks:
                                   1.  .................................. is about expansion and contraction of money and the central bank is
                                       the implementing body of the monetary policy
                                   2.  .................................. equals to M2 + Term Deposits of residents with a contractual maturity
                                       of over one year with the Banking System + Call/Term borrowings from 'Non-depository'
                                       Financial Corporations by the Banking System.



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