Macroscan
  • home
  • themes
    • Macroeconomics
    • Finance
    • Fiscal Policy
    • Monetary Policy
    • Trade and balance of payments
    • Food and Agriculture
    • Industry
    • Services
    • Employment
    • Poverty
    • World Economy
    • Development Economics
    • Economy and Society
    • Political Economy
  • about us
  • register
  • contact us
  • archives

Finance

Home Finance

Household savings in Troubled Times

  • November 19, 2019
  • C. P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh
  • Finance, Macroeconomics
  • 0 Comments

The experience of depositors in the Punjab and Maharashtra Cooperative Bank (PMCB) suggests that the government and the central bank are unwilling to protect the financial savings of ordinary households. Besides allowing depositors in the bank to access only a…

Read More→

The Liquidity Conundrum

  • November 1, 2019
  • C. P. Chandrasekhar
  • Finance, Monetary Policy
  • 0 Comments

A common refrain in assessments of India’s current economic predicament is that the economy is performing below potential because of a lack of ‘liquidity’. Often, this is merely a means of stating that an inadequacy of credit flow is choking…

Read More→

Banking Jitters

  • October 18, 2019
  • C. P. Chandrasekhar
  • Finance, Macroeconomics
  • 0 Comments

In an unusual and ill-advised move, the Reserve Bank of India issued a brief ‘clarification’ on October 1st which said: “There are rumours in some locations about certain banks including cooperative banks, resulting in anxiety among the depositors. RBI would…

Read More→

Market Jitters that carry a Message

  • October 15, 2019
  • C. P. Chandrasekhar
  • Finance, Monetary Policy
  • 0 Comments

Mid-September saw some unusual developments in US money markets, which gave market players and monetary authorities the jitters. Over three days, a key short term interest rate rose sharpy to reach levels last touched about a decade ago, when the…

Read More→

A Tax Policy that could work

  • October 14, 2019
  • Jayati Ghosh
  • Finance, Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics
  • 0 Comments

The Indian government should now be desperate to raise more tax revenues. It missed its tax targets massively in the last fiscal year, largely because of poor goods and services tax (GST) collections. Its declared budgetary target for the current…

Read More→

The Burden of Public Spending

  • October 10, 2019
  • C. P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh
  • Finance, Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics
  • 0 Comments

It is only too evident that the Modi government is a strongly centralising one in many ways – and this is also clear from various fiscal moves. In 2015, it accepted the recommendation of the 14th Finance Commission to increase…

Read More→

India’s Economic and Social ills and what to do about them

  • September 19, 2019
  • Amiya Kumar Bagchi
  • Finance
  • 0 Comments

Only a few weeks ago, the central government was talking grandly about India reaching a $5-trillion economy and refusing to recognise the severe slowdown India is going through. (This is not such a grand ambition when compared with China, which…

Read More→

Bank Credit Post-demonetisation

  • September 12, 2019
  • C. P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh
  • Finance
  • 0 Comments

One of the unusual features of the Indian economy relates to the banking sector, with bad loans of commercial banks becoming a serious problem, even at relatively low aggregate credit to GDP ratios by international standards. Figure 1 indicates that…

Read More→

Big Banks not a Solution

  • September 11, 2019
  • C. P. Chandrasekhar
  • Finance, Macroeconomics
  • 0 Comments

On August 30, as the media waited for the release of the second quarter growth figures that would reveal severe growth deceleration, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman sought to pre-empt any adverse response with a major policy announcement. Ten public sector…

Read More→

A Rate Cut that Failed to Please

  • August 16, 2019
  • C. P. Chandrasekhar
  • Finance
  • 0 Comments

On 31 July, the United States Federal Reserve System (US Fed) announced its decision to cut its benchmark short-term interest rate by one quarter of a percentage point to a target range between 2% and 2.25%. It also announced that…

Read More→
  • 1
  • …
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • …
  • 27
New on Macroscan
  • The Geopolitics of the Natural Gas Trade November 13, 2024
  • The Kazan Summit of BRICS November 11, 2024
  • The Angst over China’s Slowdown October 29, 2024
  • Economics Nobel: No surprises October 28, 2024
  • The Dialectics of Wealth and Poverty October 28, 2024
  • How not to Measure Poverty October 21, 2024
  • Falling Shares of Labour Income October 15, 2024
Sections
  • Articles
  • Features
  • Obitutary
  • Special Features
  • Announcements
  • Video

MacroScan is a website managed by professional economists seeking to provide an alternative to conservative and mainstream positions in economics. The site is maintained by the Economic Research Foundation, New Delhi.

© MACROSCAN 2026