Capital expenditure by Central and State governments crossed their pre-pandemic levels faster than GDP: Crisil

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The capital expenditure by Central and State governments have crossed their pre-pandemic levels faster than the gross domestic product. While Covid necessitated huge spends by governments around the world, there was a simultaneous decline in their revenues, which led to higher fiscal deficit and debt, said a study by Crisil Ratings.

India’s fiscal deficit widened to 9.4 per cent of GDP in fiscal 2021 from 4.6 per cent logged in fiscal 2020. Despite this, the Central government capex was 31 per cent higher year-on-year this fiscal while that of States registered a modest rise over the low base of fiscal 2020.

The State capex is typically 1.4 times higher than that of Central government, thereby playing the predominant role in infrastructure building. This fiscal, the Centre has begun pruning certain spends, mainly revenue expenditure, as pandemic-related relief measures are rolled back, even as revenue collections have improved.

In the first half of this fiscal (April-September), the Centre had spent 41 per cent of its budgeted target for the entire year. On the other hand, State governments have managed to spend 29 per cent of their targets.

Govt capex

Government capex for April-October was ₹2.5 lakh crore. This is 28 per cent higher year-on-year (on a low base) and 26 per cent higher than the pre-pandemic, or fiscal 2020, level for the same period

Major capex has gone into road transport and highways, railways, housing, telecommunication, and health. Separately, rural development spending on rural roads, housing, and other infrastructure showed a 14 per cent increase over pre-pandemic levels, said the report.

In the first half capex of 16 States rose 78 per cent year-on-year. It was 17 per cent higher than in the same period pre-pandemic. These states had spent 29 per cent of their budget estimates in the first half.

While this might seem low, States typically tend to spend most of their capex budgets towards the end of the year.

Of the 16 States, six (Chhattisgarh, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab, Rajasthan and Telangana) achieved the target set by the Ministry of Finance of spending 45 per cent of budget estimates by the first half.

This makes them eligible for availing of additional borrowing of 0.5 per cent of gross state domestic product for incremental capex in this fiscal.

On the other hand, Maharashtra, Odisha and Jharkhand lagged, having spent less than 20 per cent of budgeted capex in the first half.

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Private banks cut more rates than PSBs as overall rate transmission improves, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Rate transmission, the pet peeve of the Reserve Bank of India has improved substantially following the introduction of external benchmarks with the private banks sniping more than public sector peers.

The overall lending rates have fallen as much as 100 basis points, with the weighted average lending rates for outstanding rupee loans of commercial banks fell 96 basis points between March 2020 and October 21, according to RBI data.

But these rates have fallen more sharply for private sector banks at 109 basis points compared to 85 bps dip for public sector banks and 187 bps for the foreign banks in the country.

The central bank has however cut its benchmark repo rate much higher by 115 bps during the period, and also introduced a number of measures to enhance liquidity of banks to deal with the pandemic induced crisis.

Policy transmission

Policy transmission has been at a much faster pace since the pandemic. In the 19-month period prior to the onset of the pandemic, the benchmark policy 135 bps. But the banks lowered their lending rates only by 15 basis points between March 2019 and March 2020.

A research paper by the Reserve Bank of India economist notes that the transmission of policy repo rate changes to deposit and lending rates of commercial banks (SCBs) has improved since the introduction of external benchmark-based pricing of loans.

The paper said that the transmission showed further improvement since March 2020 on account of sizeable policy rate cuts, and persisting surplus liquidity conditions resulting from various system level as well as targeted measures introduced by the Reserve Bank – cut in the cash reserve ratio (CRR)

requirements, long-term repo operations (LTROs), TLTROs, refinancing window for All India Financial Institutions (AIFIs), sector/segment specific liquidity measures (Mutual Funds, Small Finance Banks, Micro Finance Institutions/Non-Bank Financial Companies), special open market operations and regular OMOs.

External benchmarks

The share of external benchmark-linked loans in total outstanding floating rate loans increased from 2.4 per cent in September 2019 to 32 per cent in June 2021, contributing to a faster and fuller transmission.

There has been a concomitant fall in the share of MCLR-linked loans from 83.6 per cent to 60.2 per cent, over the same period, although these still have the largest share in outstanding floating rate loans.

As lending rates under the external benchmark regime undergo automatic adjustments with the changes in the benchmark rate, banks are incentivised to adjust their term as well as saving deposit rates to cushion their net interest margins and profitability, which then hastens the adjustment in banks’ marginal cost of funds, and MCLRs.

Earlier hurdles

While the Reserve Bank has periodically refined the process of interest rate setting by banks, transmission has hitherto been sluggish as banks relied on their own cost of funds, which is internal benchmarks.

“The systems were also characterised by opacity, especially regarding the interest rate resetting practices for existing borrowers,” the central bank said.

To address these rigidities, the RBI had decided to move to an external benchmark system – an interest rate outside the control of a bank and not necessarily linked to its internal costs – for select categories of loans (viz., all new floating rate personal or retail loans and floating rate loans to micro and small enterprises (MSEs) to the policy repo rate or 3-month or 6-month T-bill rate or other specified benchmarks effective October 1, 2019, and for medium enterprises effective April 1, 2020).



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Bank unions call for two-day nationwide bank strike on Dec 16-17

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The United Forum of Bank Unions (UFBU) has given a two-day nationwide strike call for banks on December 16-17 in opposition to the proposed privatisation of two public sector banks (PSBs).

“We have served Strike notice to both the IBA and the government,” CH Venkatachalam, General Secretary of All India Bank Employees Association (AIBEA) told BusinessLine.

The government is widely expected to introduce a Bill — the Banking Laws (amendment) Bill — in the Parliament’s ongoing winter session to pave the way for the privatisation of two public sector banks.

This Bill is yet to officially get Cabinet approval but sources say that this may have been discussed at today’s Cabinet meeting.

Also see: Just debate: Opposition needs to re-establish House scrutiny by debating laws, and not disrupting proceedings

UFBU, a representative body of nine bank unions, has been opposed to government’s privatisation attempts. In February this year — soon after the government announced in the Budget that two banks will be privatised — the UFBU gave a strike call for March 15–16, a success going by the expanded participation of bank employees and officers.

The UFBU, which met on November 29-30, has decided to unleash agitations including dharna in all State capitals up to December 4.

“On the day of the introduction of the Bill, there will be a demonstration/morcha before the Parliament,” said Venkatachalam. A Twitter campaign is planned for December 10. UFBU also plans to submit an online petition to the Prime Minister on December 14.

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Visa CEO: Covid caused permanent shift to digital payments

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Al Kelly believes there has been a permanent shift in how consumers worldwide pay for goods and services. His 91-year-old parents are a prime example.

The CEO of payments processing giant Visa recently visited his mother just after she’d finished buying her groceries online — something she’d never done prior to Covid-19. “She said to me I cannot believe I wasn’t doing this before the pandemic,’” Kelly said in an interview with The Associated Press.

Kelly is more than five years into his tenure as the head of one of the world’s largest payments companies and arguably, one of the world’s best-known brands. Since he took over, the company’s stock has tripled in value as more of us pay with Visa’s credit and debit cards — a trend bolstered by the pandemic, as once cash-only establishments started accepting plastic and shoppers did more transactions online.

But while the shift to online shopping is helping Visa’s bottom line, the company is facing new forms of competition, particularly from Silicon Valley, who have debuted alternative forms of payment that go around the traditional Visa and Mastercard networks.

Also read: Cryptos, far from the regulators’ glare

The company has also gotten pushback from Washington, where skeptical policymakers have questioned Visa’s dominance of the payments industry. Visa abandoned its intent to purchase Plaid, a company that helps merchants and banks better accept online payments, after the Justice Department sued to stop the merger, citing antitrust concerns.

Pandemic push

Visa does not issue credit or debit cards. It’s a payment processor, providing the network between the bank that issues that card and the merchant accepting that card as payment. In exchange, Visa charges a fee from every transaction that runs on its network, which translates into billions of dollars in profit and revenue each year.

During the pandemic, more consumers became comfortable purchasing routine items online or with their smart phones to avoid risky in-person interactions. This was particularly seen in parts of the economy that have traditionally been cash-heavy such as grocery stores, coffee shops and bars.

Kelly pointed to the growth in debit card usage in the pandemic as an example. Debit cards are typically thought of as equivalent to cash in the payments industry — they can be used to buy items, but also to withdraw cash at an ATM.

In the past year, debit card purchasing volumes on Visa’s network rose 23 per cent from a year ago, while cash withdrawals were only up 4 per cent. “People are choosing not to get cash to shop but actually using their debit cards to shop now,” he said.

Also read: Digital payments remain strong, marginal decline in November

Any shift away from cash and digital payments will ultimately be good for Visa’s bottom line. Even a shift of 1 per cent or 2 per cent of consumers’ payments away from cash and onto credit and debit cards could result in tens of billions of dollars of additional transactions crossing over Visa’s network.

To talk about the size and scope of Visa often requires dealing in numbers that are usually reserved for describing the federal government. Visa processed $10.4 trillion in payments on its network in the fiscal year ended in September.

That’s up roughly 16 per cent from fiscal 2019, before the pandemic disrupted global trade and travel. The only payment processor larger than Visa is China’s UnionPay, which benefits as a payment monopoly bolstered by the large Chinese population and the world’s second-largest economy.

Competition

For decades, Visa and its primary competitor Mastercard have held the dominant market position in how people pay for goods and services, with American Express a distant third. But that duopoly is being challenged by the likes of Venmo, Affirm, PayPal and other fintech companies now providing payments services to both customers and merchants. Apple operates its own payment system.

And cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin, etherium and others still hold the promise of being alternative forms of payment outside the traditional banking system. In short, how one pays for goods and services is not as simple as “cash or credit” — with the credit choices being Visa, Mastercard or American Express — as it was five years ago.

Kelly sees Visa’s ubiquity as one of its strongest selling points as more competition arises. True to its old advertising slogan, “it’s everywhere you want to be,” Visa has had years to build out the infrastructure and merchant network to accept its cards. “There will always be new forms to pay, but they will still need an infrastructure that creates utility and security that they need,” he said.

Also read: WhatsApp gets NPCI nod for doubling payments user base

But the increased competitive space for payments has made some merchants start questioning whether Visa’s armour may be weakened. Merchants have long been upset with the fees they pay to the processors to accept credit cards — which typically range from 1 per cent to 3 per cent. It’s often a retailer’s largest expense after payroll and the cost of buying goods. Merchants have previously used their collective power in Washington to cap fees on certain types of transactions, particularly debit cards.

Amazon has said it will stop accepting Visa credit cards issued in the United Kingdom early next year, saying Visa’s fees are too high compared to Mastercard and other payment processors. Visa has pushed back. Visa and Amazon have a co-branded credit card together that is up for renewal soon, and Amazon may be looking for leverage.

“Consumers should be able to use their Visa cards wherever they choose,” Kelly said. ”When a merchant restricts choice, no one wins. In this case, the merchant is not respecting the choice of the consumer.”

Industry analysts and investors have taken the Amazon spat as a sign that Visa may face increased competition in coming years or may face future conflicts with big merchants upset with the fees they are paying to Visa and Mastercard to use their respective payment networks. Visa shares have fallen more than 7 per cent this month alone.

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IDFC FIRST Bank debuts FIRST Private Infinite Card, India’s first standalone metal debit card, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], December 1 : IDFC FIRST Bank today announced the launch of FIRST Private Infinite, the country’s first-ever standalone metal debit card, in partnership with Visa, the global leader in digital payments.

FIRST Private Infinite is a lifetime free card designed specifically for customers who are part of the Bank’s FIRST Private program, a premium savings and wealth offering. The FIRST Private program offers an unrivalled banking and investment experience to customers and comes with a range of exceptional investment, banking, lifestyle and wellness benefits.

A statement black card, FIRST Private Infinite is crafted from hybrid metal with details etched in silver, created to deliver an exclusive payment experience. True to its top-of-the-line proposition, the benefits of FIRST Private Infinite debit card are specifically curated for premium cardholders and include complimentary domestic and international lounge access for cardholders and companions, unparalleled insurance coverage, a road assistance program and access to golf courses across the country.

Amit Kumar, Head – Retail Liabilities, IDFC FIRST Bank, said, “Metal cards are preferred by customers given their distinctive look and feel. Our FIRST Private Infinite debit card adds luxury and style to our customers’ payments experience. It is crafted to stand out fresh and aligns with the exclusivity of the FIRST Private program. As the industry’s first metal debit card, FIRST Private Infinite takes our cards portfolio to the next level of quality and excellence.”

T R Ramachandran, Group Country Manager, India and South Asia, Visa said, “At Visa, we are delighted to partner with IDFC FIRST Bank on their affluent debit proposition – the FIRST Private Metal debit card. A set of carefully curated benefits and experiences across travel, health & insurance, dining, entertainment and lifestyle, coupled with the power and promise of the Visa network and brand, is sure to resonate with affluent Indian consumers and households. We eagerly look forward to the launch and scale-up of this innovative card offering.”

IDFC FIRST Bank offers a comprehensive digital savings account solution that includes a seamless online account opening process, video KYC and a new age digital platform for mobile and netbanking with easy-to-navigate user interface. The Bank’s digital wealth management solutions are available to customers on the mobile app and netbanking platform which offer unique features such as a ‘Consolidated Investment Dashboard’.

Created in 2018 by the merger of renowned infrastructure financing institution IDFC Ltd. and leading technology NBFC, Capital First, IDFC FIRST Bank, with a balance sheet of Rs. 1,72,502 crore, has provided over 30 million loans in its combined history and serves customers in over 60,000 villages, cities and towns across the length and breadth of the country. In a short time, the Bank has expanded to 599 branches, 185 asset service centres, 720 ATMs including 99 recyclers and 630 rural business correspondent centres across the country, a next-generation net and mobile banking platform and 24/7 Customer Care services, and is incrementally growing digitally. IDFC FIRST Bank is committed to bring high-quality banking at affordable rates to India. The Bank also offers technology-enabled corporate banking solutions.



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How Indian banks are leveraging blockchain technology, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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In a bid to foster blockchain technology for providing various financial services, banks have put in place Indian Banks’ Blockchain Infrastructure Company Private Limited (IBBIC).

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has informed that it has been proactive in providing guidance for development of blockchain-based application through its new regulatory sandbox environment, the government told the Rajya Sabha.

State Bank of India (SBI) and Canara Bank are part of a company called Indian Banks’ Blockchain Infrastructure Company Private Limited for using blockchain technology for providing various financial services. SBI has informed that as a part of IBBIC development, it has initiated steps to incorporate blockchain technology in trade-related transactions,” the government said.

Further, SBI has been onboarded on a blockchain-enabled platform, for exchanging payment-related compliance queries.

Canara Bank has informed that it had formed a small technology innovation team, which is working on identifying the potential use cases best suited to banking operations, he added.

The deployment

Banks are looking to deploy the blockchain technology to solve issues in the processing of Letters of Credit (LCs), GST invoices and e-way bills.

Currently, the process of issuing an LC is relatively slow and requires human intervention to prevent frauds, authenticate transactions, and balance the ledger.

Using blockchain to issue LCs would potentially solve these issues. Even elemental fraud like the issuance of two LCs on a single invoice can be easily prevented with the help of this blockchain technology.

The move is expected to eliminate paperwork, reduce transaction processing time, and offer a secure environment. The system will be based on Infosys’ Finacle Connect, a blockchain-based platform that enables digitisation and automation of trade-related finance processes. Disbursements on domestic LCs, which used to take four to five days, can be done in four hours with the technology. The technology has already been deployed or piloted by the likes of SBI and Axis Bank at an individual level.

Who are the stakeholders of IBBIC?

Out of the 15 banks, eleven are private sector banks while four are public sector ones.

The private banks include HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank, Axis Bank, IndusInd Bank, Yes Bank, RBL Bank, IDFC Bank, South Indian Bank, and Federal Bank. And, the public sector units encompass Bank of Baroda, SBI, Canara Bank, and Indian Bank.

The incorporation of IBBIC is similar to that of the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI), which is an umbrella organization that handles critical real-time products like RuPay, UPI, and FASTag.



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NCLAT rejects Kotak Bank’s plea to set aside insolvency proceedings against MSEL, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) has dismissed a petition filed by Kotak Mahindra Bank along with a director of debt-ridden McNally Sayaji Engineering Ltd (MSEL) to set aside insolvency proceedings against the manufacturer of mineral processing equipment.

A two-member NCLAT bench upheld the orders of the Kolkata bench of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), which had on February 11, 2021, admitted a plea by ICICI Bank and directed to initiate insolvency proceedings against MSEL.

The NCLT order was challenged by Kotak Mahindra Bank and a director of the suspended board of MSEL before the appellate insolvency tribunal NCLAT.

Kotak Mahindra Bank had contended that besides it, four other banks — ICICI Bank, DBS, IDBI and SBI — had advanced loans to MSEL and NCLT had failed to appreciate that more than 50 per cent members of the lenders’ consortium had opposed initiation of corporate insolvency resolution process (CIRP), as they were considering restructuring of loan outside the IBC.

Restructuring of loans is more beneficial to the creditors as they will not have to take a haircut, Kotak Mahindra Bank had submitted.

In the eventuality of a resolution plan being implemented or liquidation process being initiated, financial creditors, including Kotak Mahindra Bank, will have to take a haircut, it added.

Moreover, the appellant contended that the case was not maintainable as it was filed after the permissible period of three years after the default.

However, ICICI Bank opposed both the petitions.

It said the account of MSEL was classified as NPA on March 31, 2019 and loan recall notice was issued on January 3, 2020 — thus the application was filed within three years from the date of acknowledgement.

ICICI Bank further said Kotak Mahindra Bank’s appeal was not maintainable and filed at the behest of MSEL.

Moreover, Kotak Mahindra Bank has not raised any challenge to the existence of debt, default and completeness of the application filed by ICICI Bank. The CIRP is not adversarial to the interest of the corporate debtor or its creditors, it said.

The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) is a beneficial legislation for equal treatment to the creditors and to revive MSEL, submitted ICICI Bank.

Rejecting the submissions of the appellant, the NCLAT said the Supreme Court has already held that the date on which a bank declares an account of corporate debtor as NPA is the date of default. In the present case, the MSEL acocount was classified as NPA on March 31, 2019.

NCLAT said Kotak Mahindra Bank has no valid ground to challenge the NCLT order and it was “convinced with the argument of Counsel for the Respondent No 1 (ICICI Bank) and hold that the Appellant has no locus standi” to file this appeal.

The appellant has “failed to point out any legal or factual flaw in the impugned order”, it added.

“With the aforesaid discussion, we are of the view that no interference is called for in the impugned order. Thus, the Appeals are dismissed,” said NCLAT.

On Kotak Mahindra Bank’s plea to consider restructuring of debt outside the purview of IBC, the appellate tribunal said NCLT was aware of the proposal but the lenders’ consortium has not filed any application for deferment of the proceedings before it.

“There is no duty cast on the NCLT that no sooner NCLT gets information that outside the purview of IBC any restructuring proposal is under consideration before the consortium of lenders then…(it) should defer the proceedings for initiation of CIRP,” it said.

In the present case, MSEL has committed default and the application is complete, Therefore, NCLT has no option except to admit the plea to initiate the insolvency process, it said.



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Depositors of PMC Bank to get pre-Covid interest rate, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: Retail deposits at Punjab & Maharashtra Cooperative (PMC) Bank will continue to earn the higher interest rates offered by the bank at the time of the moratorium in September 2019 until March 2021. This is despite the fact that all banks have brought down interest rates following the sharp rate cuts by the RBI in the wake of the pandemic.

The high rates for two years will help compensate for the five-year interest holiday from March 2021. Although interest for subsequent years on high value deposits that are locked in will be capped at a return equivalent to the savings bank rate of SBI, the depositors will have an upside. Bankers said that as Unity SFB will be a startup bank with a high capital base, it will have every incentive to offer better terms to depositors and restore their confidence to ensure that thIn terms of the resolution plan, customers with up to Rs 5 lakh will get their money immediately as this would be made available by the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation. Those with deposits up to Rs 10 lakh will get most of their funds in four years, while those with deposits above Rs 15 lakh will have to wait for 10 years.

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Changes in Banking Regulation Act in works, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The government is eyeing changes to the Banking Regulation Act to bar new bank licence holders from certain specified business activities through the main banking entity.

The move is aimed at aligning certain sections of the Banking Regulation Act with the norms stipulated by the banking regulator, Reserve Bank of India.

Provisions being examined as part of the proposed amendment include rules which restrict new bank license holders to carry out specified business activities both from a separate entity and the bank.

At present, under Section 19 of the BR Act, a banking company can form any subsidiary for undertaking any business permissible for a banking company to undertake. “We have received representation from various stakeholders, this is being examined but no decision has been taken,” said a government official aware of the developments adding that there has been a demand to bring parity as existing banks including foreign lenders are allowed to undertake such business both through subsidiary and in-house.

In 2016, the RBI had issued “Guidelines for ‘on tap’ Licensing of Universal Banks in the Private Sector” under which it stipulated that specialised activities can be conducted through a separate entity after prior approval from RBI under the non-operating financial holding company or NOFHC. But, it has to be ensured that similar activities are not conducted through the bank.

In their representation, some stakeholders argued that the RBI guidelines and the provisions under the Banking Regulation Act are not in sync. The internal working group of RBI had also recommended that the concerns with regard to banks undertaking different activities through subsidiaries or associates need to be addressed through suitable regulations till the NOFHC structure is made feasible and operational.



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Private sector banks lower lending rates more than PSU Banks during the pandemic, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Private sector banks have been leading the way in reducing cost of funds in the past year of pandemic even as state-run banks are not far behind. While the overall lending rates have fallen as much as 100 basis points, for private banks it has been more.

Weighted average lending rates for outstanding rupee loans of commercial banks fell 96 basis points- bps (one basis point is 0.01 per cent) between March 2020 and October 21, data released by the RBI indicates.

But these rates have fallen more sharply for private sector banks at 109 basis points compared to 85 bps dip for public sector banks and 187 bps for the foreign banks in the country.

The central bank has however lowered its benchmark repo rate much higher by 115 bps during the period and also introduced a number of measures to enhance liquidity of banks to deal with the pandemic induced crisis.

Policy transmission has been much faster pace since the pandemic. In the 19 month period prior to the onset of the pandemic, the benchmark policy 135 bps. But the banks lowered their lending rates only by 15 basis points between March 2019 and March 20 as reflected in the weighted average lending rates on outstanding loans of commercial banks.

A research paper by the Reserve Bank of India economist notes that the transmission of policy repo rate changes to deposit and lending rates of commercial banks (SCBs) has improved since the introduction of external benchmark-based pricing of loans.

The paper also adds that the transmission showed further improvement since March 2020 on account of sizeable policy rate cuts, and persisting surplus liquidity conditions resulting from various system level as well as targeted measures introduced by the Reserve Bank – cut in the cash reserve ratio (CRR) requirements, long-term repo operations (LTROs), TLTROs, refinancing window for All India Financial Institutions (AIFIs), sector/segment specific liquidity measures (Mutual Funds, Small Finance Banks, Micro Finance Institutions/Non-Bank Financial Companies), special open market operations and regular OMOs.



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