Topics
Micro Economics
Introduction to Micro and Macro Economics
- Branches of Economics
- Father of Econometrics: Ragnar Frisch
- Microeconomics
- Macroeconomics
- Micro Economics VS Macro Economics
Introduction to Micro Economics
- Analysis of Market Structure
- Microeconomics
- Micro Economics - Slicing Method
- Use of Marginalism Principle in Micro Economics
- Micro Economics - Price Theory
- Micro Economic - Price Determination
- Micro Economics - Working of a Free Market Economy
- Micro Economics - International Trade and Public Finance
- Welfare Economics
- Micro Economics - Useful to Government
- Assumption of Micro Economic Analysis
Consumers Behavior
Analysis of Demand and Elasticity of Demand
Analysis of Supply
Types of Market and Price Determination Under Perfect Competition
Factors of Production
- Factors of Production - Feature of Capital
- Factors of Production
Utility Analysis
- Basic Concepts of Microeconomics > Utility
- Commodities and Their Specific Utility for Individuals
- Total Utility and Marginal Utility
- Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility
- Paradox of Value
- Relationship Between Marginal Utility and Price
- Indifference Curve Analysis by Hicks and Allen
Macro Economics
Introduction to Macro Economics
- Macroeconomics
- Micro Economics VS Macro Economics
- Allocation of Resource and Economic Variable
National Income
Determinants of Aggregates
- Total Demand for Good and Services
- Concept of Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply
- Consumption
- Investment Demand
- Government Demand
- Foreign Demand
- Difference Betweeen Export and Import
- Effect of Population of Consumption Expediture
- Types of Investment Expenditure
- Micro Eco-Equilibrium
Money
- Concept of Money
- Functions of Money
- Standard of Deferred Payment
- Standard of Transfer Payment
- Money - Store of Value
- Barter system
- Monetary Payments
- Concept of Good Money
Commercial Bank
Central Bank
- Central Bank
- Central Bank Function - Banker's Bank
- Central Bank as a Controller of Credit
- Monetary Function of Central Bank
- Non Monetary Function of Central Bank
- Methods of Credit Control
- Repo Rate and Reverse Repo Rate
- Central Bank Function - Goverment Bank
Public Economics
- Introduction of Public Economics
- Features of Public Economics
- Government Budget
- Objectives of Government Budget
- Features of Government Budget
- Public Economics - Budget (1 Year)(1 April to 31 March)
- Types of Budget
- Taxable Income
- Budgetary Accounting in India
- Budgetary Accounting - Consolidated , Contingency and Public Fund
- Components (Structure) of the Government Budget
- Factor Influencing Government Budget
Demand Analysis
- Concept of Demand
- Demand Schedule
- Individual Demand Schedule
- Market Demand Schedule
- Demand Curve
- Individual Demand Curve
- Market Demand Curve
- Reasons for the Downward Slope of the Demand Curve
- Types of Demand
- Determinants of Demand
- Law of Demand
- Exceptions to the Law of Demand
- Variations in Demand
- Changes in Demand
Elasticity of Demand
- Concept of Elasticity of Demand
- Types of Elasticity of Demand > Income Elasticity
- Types of Elasticity of Demand > Cross Elasticity
- Types of Elasticity of Demand > Price Elasticity
- Perfectly Elastic Demand
- Perfectly Inelastic Demand
- Unitary Elastic Demand
- Relatively Elastic Demand
- Relatively Inelastic Demand
- Methods of Measuring Price Elasticity of Demand
- Linear Demand Curve
- Non-Linear Demand Curve
- Factors Influencing the Elasticity of Demand
- Importance of Elasticity of Demand
- Determinants of Price Elasticity of Demand
Supply Analysis
- Concept of Supply
- Concept of Total Output
- Concept of Stock
- Distinguish between Stock and Supply
- Supply Schedule
- Individual Supply Schedule
- Market Supply Schedule
- Determinants of Supply
- Law of Supply
- Variations in Supply
- Changes in Supply
- Cost Concepts > Total Costs
- Cost Concepts > Average Cost
- Cost Concepts > Marginal Cost
- Revenue Concepts
- Total Revenue
- Average Revenue
- Marginal Revenue
Forms of Market
- Concept of Market
- Classification of Market > Based on Place
- Classification of Market > Based on Place
- Classification of Market > Based on Time
- Classification of Market > Based on Competition
- Perfect Competition
- Price Determination Under Perfect Competition
- Imperfect Competition
- Monopoly
- Concept of Monopsony
- Oligopoly
- Monopolistic Competition
Index Numbers
- Index Numbers
- Features of Index Numbers
- Types of Index Numbers
- Index Numbers Used by Government of India
- Significance of Index Numbers
- Rebasing of GDP, IIP, and WPI
- Construction of Index Numbers
- Methods of Constructing Index Numbers > Simple Index Number
- Price Index Number
- Quantity Index Number
- Value Index Number
- Methods of Constructing Index Numbers > Weighted Index Number
- Laaspeyre’s Price Index Number
- Paasche’s Price Index Number
- Concepts of Sensex and Nifty
- Crops in India's Agricultural and Industrial Production Index
- Limitations of Index Numbers
National Income
- Concept of National Income
- Features of National Income
- Circular Flow of National Income
- Two Sector Model of Circular Flow of National Income
- Three Sector Model of Circular Flow of National Income
- Four Sector Model of Circular Income
- Different Concepts of National Income
- Concept of Green GNP
- Methods of Measurement of National Income
- Output Method/Product Method
- Income Method
- Expenditure Method
- Concept of Mixed income
- Difficulties in the Measurement of National Income
- Importance of National Income Analysis
Public Finance in India
- Public Finance
- Difference Between Public Finance and Private Finance
- Structure of Public Finance > Public Expenditure
- Important Social Welfare Schemes by the Government
- Structure of Public Finance > Public Revenue
- Public Revenue > Taxes
- Types of Taxes
- Direct Tax
- Indirect Tax
- Public Revenue > Non-tax Revenue
- Structure of Public Finance > Public Debt
- Structure of Public Finance > Fiscal Policy
- Structure of Public Finance > Financial Administration
- GST(Economics)
- Government Budget
- Revenue and Capital Budgets
- Types of Budget
- Importance of Budget
Money Market and Capital Market in India
- Concept of Financial Market
- Money Market in India
- Structure of Money Market in India > Organized Sector
- Structure of Money Market in India > Organized Sector
- Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
- Commercial Banks
- Co-operative Banks
- Development Financial Institutions (DFIs)
- Discount and Finance House of India (DFHI)
- Structure of Money Market in India > Unorganized Sector
- Money Market Instruments
- Role of Money Market in India
- Problems of the Indian Money Market
- Reforms Introduced in the Money Market
- Recent Developments in Banking Sector
- Capital Market in India
- Structure of Capital Market in India
- Role of Capital Market in India
- Problems of the Capital Market
- Regional Stock Exchanges in India
- Reforms Introduced in the Capital Market
- Economic Policy in an Economy
Foreign Trade of India
- India’s Trade Relations Before 1947
- Internal Trade
- Foreign Trade of India
- Types of Foreign Trade
- Role of Foreign Trade
- India’s Recent Trade Relations with China and Japan
- Composition of India’s Foreign Trade
- India’s Foreign Trade Share in GNI
- Composition of India's Imports
- Composition of India's Exports
- Direction of India’s Foreign Trade
- Trends in India’s Foreign Trade since 2001
- Concept of Balance of Payments
- Balance of Trade
- Member Nations of OPEC and OECD
- Introduction
- Definitions: Central Bank
- Functions of the Central Bank
- Evolution of Central Banking
- Need for a Central Bank
- Importance in Developing Economies
- Key Points: Central Bank
Introduction
The central bank is the top authority controlling a country's banks and money, like the referee managing a football game. It sets monetary policy, supervises banks, and ensures economic stability. Global examples: Bank of England (1694, first true central bank), Federal Reserve (USA), RBI (India, est. April 1, 1935; nationalised 1949). RBI HQ: Mumbai (commercial capital); 4 zonal offices (Delhi-North, Kolkata-East, Chennai-South, Mumbai-West); 25 offices + 9 sub-offices in state capitals.
Key Takeaway:
- Not profit-driven (public welfare focus).
- Governor as executive head.
Definitions: Central Bank
- "A bank which constitutes the apex of the monetary and banking structure of the country." — De Kock
- "A central bank is "The bank in any country is one which has been entrusted the duty of regulating the volume of currency and credit in that country." — Bank for International Settlements
Functions of Central Bank
- Bank of Issue: Monopoly on notes/coins (except ₹1 by the Govt). Issue Dept. backs with gold/forex reserves (India: min. reserves). Advantages: Uniform currency, public trust, and credit control.
Example: RBI prints ₹10-₹2000; prevents fake money flood.
Analogy: Factory with safety locks. - Govt Banker, Fiscal Agent, Adviser: Keeps govt accounts (deposits, payments, short loans—"ways & means advances"). Manages debt (issues loans, pays interest), forex buys/sells, advises on inflation/budget/devaluation.
Except for the J&K state. - Banks' Banker: Holds reserves (CRR: 3-15% demand deposits, 2-9% time). Lends via bill discounting; clearing house for inter-bank claims (no cash transfer). Supervises licensing/expansion.
Advantages: Strengthens the system, elastic credit. - Custodian of Forex Reserves: Routes all forex; stabilises rupee (buys/sells currencies); enforces controls.
Example: 2026 rupee defence vs dollar rise. - Lender of Last Resort: Emergency funds to banks (discounts/securities) to prevent collapse—"sine qua non" function.
COVID Example: RBI infused ₹9 lakh crore. - Clearing House: Settles bank claims via book entries in major cities—saves time/money.
- Credit Controller: Quantitative (bank rate, open market ops, CRR/SLR); qualitative (directives). Fights inflation/deflation.
2026 Example: Repo rate hikes cooled prices. - Promotional/Developmental: Builds banks (rediscounts); aids agriculture/industry (NABARD, IFCI, IDBI); develops money markets; priority-sector lending.
- Data Publisher: Economic reports for policy-making.
- Monetary Policy for Crises: Designs policies (rate changes, liquidity) to fight recessions/inflation. Like an economy's emergency toolkit.
- Bank Staff Training: Offers programs (RBI Academy) on regulations, digital banking, risk mgmt. Upskills 10,000+ staff yearly for modern challenges.
- International Ties: Partners with IMF, World Bank, ADB for funding, advice, and standards. Aids India's global finance role.
Evolution of Central Banking
Central banks started as private institutions but became economic "referees" by the 20th century. Key milestones:
- 1668 – Sweden established the Riksbank, the world's first central bank.
- 1694 – The Bank of England was established, becoming the model for a true central bank.
- 1800 – Establishment of the Bank of France.
- 1875 – Germany set up the Reichsbank.
- 1882 – Establishment of the Bank of Japan.
- 1914 – The Federal Reserve System was established in the United States.
- 1921 – The South African Reserve Bank was established.
- 1928 – Establishment of the Central Bank of China.
- 1935 – Establishment of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand.
- 1950s – Establishment of the Central Bank of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) and the Bank of Israel (1954).
By 1900, all of Europe had central banks; the 20th century saw the worldwide spread of crisis management. RBI was born on April 1, 1935.
Need for a Central Bank
Commercial banks chase profits, ignoring national needs—like lending during inflation booms. They create credit but need guidance to align with the economy's health (e.g., cut credit during high inflation).
Why can't the government do it directly?
- Needs daily banking expertise.
- Requires supervision/contact—not bureaucracy.
RBI fills the gap: Guides (not just controls) all banks for stability. Real-life: Without RBI, 1990s banking crisis worsens.
Importance in Developing Economies
Central bank = "kingpin" of money system; ensures stability + growth. Extra roles in places like India:
Key Points: Central Bank
- The central bank is the highest authority in the banking system. It controls, regulates and supervises all banks and manages the country’s monetary system.
- It formulates and implements monetary policy to control inflation, deflation, and overall credit in the economy.
- It acts as a banker, adviser and agent to the government, and also works as a “banker’s bank” by guiding and supporting commercial banks.
- The central bank has the sole authority to issue currency (except small coins/notes in some cases), ensuring a uniform and reliable money supply.
- It supports economic growth by promoting banking, developing financial institutions, managing foreign exchange, and helping priority sectors.
