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HomeNewsOpinion30 years later, the gaps in India’s financial sector reforms are still glaring

30 years later, the gaps in India’s financial sector reforms are still glaring

Strengthening financial regulators by granting them more autonomy should be part of the priority areas of the next phase of financial sector reforms 

July 22, 2021 / 11:49 IST
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The purpose of financial sector reforms is to establish an efficient financial system that will improve the allocative efficiency of resources, promote financial inclusion, protect the confidence in financial system and ensure financial stability.

After 30 years of financial sector reforms, it is worth asking to what extent India has achieved these objectives.

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India’s financial sector reforms were a part of a broader structural adjustment programme that was launched when the Indian economy faced a serious balance of payments (BOP) crisis in the early 1990s. While the BOP crisis was the immediate trigger, it gave an opportunity to reform the financial sector that was ‘repressed’ in many ways, and also responsible for slow growth.

The process of financial sector reforms that started in India in the early 1990s had three major building blocks — removing or relaxing the external constraints; introduction of prudential norms; and institutional strengthening.