Structure and Function of of Indian Financial System
Structure and Function of of Indian Financial System
A very important property of financial assets is that they do not require regular
management of the kind most tangible assets do. The financial assets have made
possible the separation of ultimate ownership and management of tangible assets.
The separation of savings from management has encouraged savings greatly.
The public sector comprises Central and state governments, departmental and non
departmental undertakings, the RBI, etc. The domestic private corporate sector
comprises non-government public and private limited companies (whether
financial or non-financial) and corrective institutions.
Of these three sectors, the dominant saver is the household sector, followed by the
domestic private corporate sector. The contribution of the public sector to total net
domestic savings is relatively small.
(ii) Mobilisation of Savings
In the allocative functions of financial institutions lies their main source of power.
By granting easy and cheap credit to particular firms, they can shift outward the
resource constraint of these firms and make them grow faster.
On the other hand, by denying adequate credit on reasonable terms to other firms,
financial institutions can restrict the growth or even normal working of these other
firms substantially. Thus, the power of credit can be used highly discriminately to
favour some and to hinder others.
The Indian Financial system (financial markets) is broadly divided under two
heads:
(i) Indian Money Market