Preamble
Preamble
Preamble
The Preamble of the Reserve Bank of India describes the basic functions of the Reserve Bank as to regulate the issue of Bank Notes and keeping of reserves with a view to securing monetary stability in India and generally to operate the currency and credit system of the country to its advantage. The Reserve Bank of India was nationalized with effect from 1st January, 1949 on the basis of the Reserve Bank of India (Transfer to Public Ownership) Act, 1948. All shares in the capital of the Bank were deemed transferred to the Central Government on payment of a suitable compensation. The image is a newspaper clipping giving the views of Governor CD Deshmukh, prior to nationalization.
Controller of Credit
The Reserve Bank of India is the controller of credit i.e. it has the power to influence the volume of credit created by banks in India. It can do so through changing the Bank rate or through open market operations. According to the Banking Regulation Act of 1949, the Reserve Bank of India can ask any particular bank or the whole banking system not to lend to particular groups or persons on the basis of certain types of securities. Since 1956, selective controls of credit are increasingly being used by the Reserve Bank. Custodian of Foreign Reserves The Reserve Bank of India has the responsibility to maintain the official rate of exchange. According to the Reserve Bank of India Act of 1934, the Bank was required to buy and sell at fixed rates any amount of sterling in lots of not less than Rs. 10,000. Supervisory functions In addition to its traditional central banking functions, the Reserve bank has certain nonmonetary functions of the nature of supervision of banks and promotion of sound banking in India. The Reserve Bank Act, 1934, and the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 have given the RBI wide powers of supervision and control over commercial and co-operative banks, relating to licensing and establishments, branch expansion, liquidity of their assets, management and methods of working, amalgamation, reconstruction, and liquidation. Promotional functions With economic growth assuming a new urgency since Independence, the range of the Reserve Bank's functions has steadily widened. The Bank now performs a variety of developmental and promotional functions, which, at one time, were regarded as outside the normal scope of central banking. The Reserve Bank was asked to promote banking habit, extend banking facilities to rural and semiurban areas, and establish and promote new specialised financing agencies. Classification of RBIs functions The monetary functions also known as the central banking functions of the RBI are related to control and regulation of money and credit, i.e., issue of currency, control of bank credit, control of foreign exchange operations, banker to the Government and to the money market. Monetary functions of the RBI are
significant as they control and regulate the volume of money and credit in the country.
CREDIT CONTROL
One of the more pleasant aspects of the latest quarterly Monetary Policy Review is the attempt by the Reserve Bank of India to be as predictable as possible, or at least less disruptive than it has been before. The notion that some elements of a tighter money policy would be announced was pretty much to be expected. While raising repo rates by 25 basis points and leaving other indicators of liquidity unchanged, the RBI Governor, Dr Y. V. Reddy, has tried to play both policeman and purveyor of optimism, the former by raising marginally the cost of capital for banks through the repo rate hike, and the latter by selectively
pushing up the provisioning norms for certain categories of borrowers hoping thereby to catch inflation by the scruff and pull it back within the 5.5 per cent limit.
METHOD OF CREDIT CONTROL There are two method of credit control: Quantitative method 1. Bank Rate Policy 2. Open Market Operations 3. Change in Reserve Ratios 4. Credit Rationing Qualitative method 1. Direct Action 2. Moral persuasion 3. Legislation 4. Publicity
Bibliography:BOOKS M.Y. Khan Indian financial system Sudhir shah-Indian economy Website www.rbi.org.in
ROUGH DRAFT
Submitted to :- Mrs. Madhuri Srivastava Submitted by :- Varnit Pratap Singh Roll num :-147