Gorakhpur Interview
Gorakhpur Interview
Gorakhpur Interview
The purpose of the accord is to ensure that financial institutions have enough
capital on account to meet obligations and absorb unexpected losses. India
has accepted Basel accords for the banking system.
So, if the Basel norms are banking standards, then who has the authority to
make them? Are they mandatory for every country?
As said earlier, the Basel Committee makes these norms. The Committee’s
decisions have no legal force. Rather, the Committee formulates supervisory
standards and guidelines and recommends statements of best practice in the
expectation that individual national authorities will implement them. In this
way, the Committee encourages convergence towards common standards
and monitors their implementation, but without attempting detailed
harmonisation of member countries’ supervisory approaches.
So, India can either accept them or reject them depending on the kind of
financial system it wants. So far, we have implemented or wished to
implement all Basel norms.
Basel I
In 1988, BCBS introduced capital measurement system called Basel capital
accord, also called as Basel 1. It focused almost entirely on credit risk. It
defined capital and structure of risk weights for banks. Naturally if the capital
with the banks is adequate to cover the risks ( e.g. a power plant) they have
invested in, then the bank is safe.
Also, suppose some nations run banks on better standards i.e. better risk
management, better returns, lower exposure to volatile markets etc., then
they have a better chance of getting foreign investment.
But, if all nations adopt uniform standards, then at least the investors can be
attracted by only the strength of the economy.
The Basel norms try to achieve exactly the same. Till date three different
Basel accords ( or norms) have come – each with a better safeguard than the
next one.
Basel II
In 2004, Basel II guidelines were published by BCBS, which were
considered to be the refined and reformed versions of Basel I
accord. The guidelines were based on three parameters.
1. Banks should maintain a minimum capital adequacy requirement of 8% of
risk assets,
3. Banks need to mandatorily disclose their risk exposure, etc to the central
bank.
This is important so that the central bank (RBI in India) is aware of the
risks that the banking system is going through.
You will find some technical words like risk exposure etc. in the text. We do
not need to go into details. We only need to know their general meaning.
Basel III
In 2010, Basel III guidelines were released. These guidelines were introduced in
response to the financial crisis of 2008.
A need was felt to further strengthen the system as banks in the developed
economies were under-capitalized, over-leveraged and had a greater reliance
on short-term funding. Too much short-term funding makes the banks prone
to risks. Banks generally rely on short-term funding because it is profitable.
Also the quantity and quality of capital under Basel II were deemed
insufficient to contain any further risk. This was because the banking system
was growing. The world economy was growing too. Hence, what is sufficient
earlier was not sufficient now.
Basel III norms aim at making most banking activities such as their trading
book activities more capital-intensive. The guidelines aim to promote a more
resilient banking system by focusing on four vital banking parameters viz.
capital, leverage, funding and liquidity.
Again we need not go in technicalities, just the broad picture.
Capital
The capital requirement (as weighed for risky assets) for Banks was more
than doubled. ( e.g. 4.5% from 2% in Basel-II accord for common equity)
Leverage
Leverage basically means buying assets with borrowed money to multiply
the gain. The underlying belief is that the asset will return the investor more
than the interest he has to pay on the loan.
Obviously doing so is risky business. Thus the Basel III puts a limit on the
banks for doing this. The numbers are not important here. Getting the
concept is important.
So, Basel III puts a requirement for the banks to maintain some liquid assets
all the time. Liquid assets are those which can be easily converted to cash.
In India, this practice can be correlated with that of maintaining CRR and
SLR.
Implementation of Basel III norms in India
The RBI has postponed the implementation of these norms to 2019.
Conclusion
It is clear that the banking system in the coming times will have to go
through a lot of rough weather. Increasing operational complexities, global
interconnectedness and high economic growth worldwide will present several
challenges for the banks. While strategies like Basel III will of course address
these challenges, what is even more important is their proper
implementation. More than this, the banks will need to have a wider outlook.
They must anticipate changes in the Indian economic system and react
accordingly. Indian banking regulations are one of the most stringent and
consequently one of the safest in the world. Let us evolve each time better
and stronger
Inflation 3.36%
CRR 4%
SLR 19.5%
Economic
Growth refers to the rise in the value of everything produced in the economy. It implies
the yearly increase in the country’s GDP or GNP, in percentage terms. It alludes to
considerable rise in per-capita national product, over a period, i.e. the growth rate of
increase in total output, must be greater than the population growth rate.
The economic trend in a country as a whole, is the major component for its business
environment. An economy whose growth rate is high provides a promising business
prospect and thus builds business confidence. In this article, you will find all the
substantial differences between economic growth and economic development.
3. Key Differences
4. Example
5. Conclusion
Comparison Chart
BASIS FOR
ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
COMPARISON
Scope Increase in the indicators like Improvement in life expectancy rate, infant
GDP, per capita income etc. mortality rate, literacy rate and poverty rates.
How it can be Upward movement in national Upward movement in real national income.
measured? income.
Micro Units Development and Refinance Agency Bank (or MUDRA Bank) is a public sector financial
institution in India. It provides loans at low rates to micro-finance institutions and non-banking financial
institutions which then provide credit to MSMEs. It was launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on 8 April
2015.[1]
Contents
[hide]
1Overview
2See also
3References
4External links
Overview[edit]
The formation of the agency was initially announced in the 2015 Union budget of India in February 2015.[2][3] It
was formally launched on 8 April.[1]
The MUDRA banks were set up under the Pradhan Mantri MUDRA Yojana scheme. It will provide its services to
small entrepreneurs outside the service area of regular banks, by using last mile agents. About
5.77 crore (57.6 million) small business have been identified as target clients using the NSSO survey of 2013.
Only 4% of these businesses get finance from regular banks. The bank will also ensure that its clients do not
fall into indebtedness and will lend responsibly. [2][4]
The bank will have an initial capital of ₹200 billion (US$3.1 billion) and a credit guarantee fund of ₹30
billion (US$460 million).[4] The bank will initially function as a non-banking financial company and a subsidiary of
the Small Industries Development Bank of India (SIDBI). Later, it will be made into a separate company.
[1]
However, it will regulate Microfinance institutions.
The bank will classify its clients into three categories and the maximum allowed loan sums will be based on the
category:[4]
Government has decided to provide an additional fund of ₹1 trillion (US$15 billion) to the market and will be
allocated as
40% to Shishu
35% to Kishor
25% to Tarun
Artisans
Microcredit
Microcredit is the small credit facility provided to the needy people whose earning
capacity is very less. The loan is provided to the borrowers who are unemployed, lacking
collateral and whose credit history is not sound.
The loan is mainly granted to help people earn their livelihood, especially, women who
can start their business and become independent.
Microcredit not only increases the income level of the poor people but also raise their
standard of living and provides the financial assistance to the poor class of people in
rural areas to help them become self-employed rather than depending on loan sharks for
raising finance who charge inflated interest rates.
The best thing about microcredit is that the loan does not require any asset as collateral.
The loan is granted for a short period only.
Microfinance
Microfinance is a broad spectrum of financial services provided to the people of low-
income groups who cannot take bank’s assistance banking and allied services. The
service is available to extremely poor people, no matter where they live.
The purpose of Microfinance Company Registration is to raise the earnings of low-class
people and let them access to deposits and loans. The clients may include women,
farmers, and pensioners.
Microfinance plays a revolutionary role in any country’s economy. It helps the poor
people to fulfill their basic needs and safeguard them from any risks. It raises the per
capita income. It encourages women empowerment by providing term economic
assistance and hence promotes gender equality.
Micro-finance institutions not only provide capital to the startups or small businessman
but also deliver such financial services to the poor people who are constantly avoided by
the formal financial sector.