Topics
Microeconomics and Macroeconomics: Introduction
Microeconomic Theory
Theory of Income and Employment
Demand and Law of Demand
- Role of Demand and Supply in Economics
- Paul A. Samuelson: Father of Modern Economics
- Concept of Demand
- Types of Demand
- Determinants of Demand
- Demand Function
- Law 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
- Importance of the Law of Demand
- Exceptions to the Law of Demand
- Movement along the Demand Curve and Shift of the Demand Curve
- Change in Quantity Demanded: Movement along the Demand Curve
- Change in Demand – Shift in Demand Curve
- Difference Between Extension and Increase in Demand
- Difference Between Contraction and Decrease in Demand
Theory of Consumer Behaviour: Marginal Utility and Indifference Curve Analysis
- Basic Concepts of Microeconomics > Utility
- Cardinal Approach (Utility Analysis)
- Total Utility and Marginal Utility
- Relationship Between Total Utility and Marginal Utility
- Approaches to Consumer Behaviour
- Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility
- Alfred Marshall: Key Contributor to Economics
- Consumer's Equilibrium through Cardinal Utility Approach
- Law of Equi-Marginal Utility
- Importance and Limitations of law of Equi-Marginal Utility
- Ordinal Utility Analysis/Indifference Curve Analysis
- Relationship Between Marginal Rate of Substitution and Marginal Utility
- Properties of Indifference Curves
- Price Line or Budget Line
- Consumer's Equilibrium through Indifference Curve Approach
Money and Banking
Balance of Payment and Exchange Rate
Elasticity of Demand
- Concept of Elasticity of Demand
- Types of Elasticity of Demand > Price Elasticity
- Methods of Measuring Price Elasticity of Demand
- Numerical Problems of Price Elasticity of Demand
- Factors Affecting Price Elasticity of Demand
- Importance of Elasticity of Demand
- Types of Elasticity of Demand > Income Elasticity
- Types of Elasticity of Demand > Cross Elasticity
Supply: Law of Supply and Price Elasticity of Supply
Public Finance
National Income
Market Mechanism: Equilibrium Price and Quantity in a Competitive Market
- Basic Concepts of Equilibrium and Equilibrium Price
- Equilibrium Price and Quantity in a Competitive Market
- Effect of Simultaneous change in Demand and Supply on Equilibrium Price
- Effects of Simultaneous Changes (Shifts) in Demand and Supply
- Some Special Cases of Equilibrium
- Applications of Tools of Demand and Supply Price Control
Laws of Returns: Returns to a Factor and Returns to Scale
- Basics of Production Theory
- Products
- Factors of Production
- Production Function
- Variation of Output in the Short-Run Returns to a Factor
- Relationship between Average Product (AP) and Marginal Product (MP)
- Relationship between Total Product (TP) and Marginal Product (MP)
- Changes in Production
- Law of Variable Proportions
- Three Stages of Production
- Explanation of the Law of Variable Proportions
- Stages of Operation and the Decision to Produce
- Variation of Output in the Long Run - Returns to Scale
- Law of Variable Proportions and Returns to Scale Compared
- Scale of Production and Concept of Indivisibility
- Economies of Scale
- Diseconomies of Scale
- Significance of Economies of Scale
Cost and Revenue Analysis
- Cost of Production
- Theories of Costs: Traditional Theory of Costs/Short Run Cost Curves
- Cost Concepts > Total Costs
- Cost Concepts > Average Cost
- Cost Concepts > Marginal Cost
- Costs in Long Run Period
- Difference Between Short - Run & Long Run Costs
- Behaviour of Cost in the Short - Run
- Relationship between Average and Marginal Cost
- Long-Run Cost Curves
- Revenue Concepts
- Types of Revenue
- Relation Between Total, Average and Marginal Revenue
- Relationship between Total, Average and Marginal Revenues under Perfect Competition
- Relationship between Total, Average and Marginal Revenue under Imperfect Competition
- Relationship Between (Mutual Determination) AR, MR, and Elasticity of Demand
- Comparative Study of Revenue Curves under Different Markets
- Significance of Revenue Curve
Forms of Market
- Concept of Market
- Market Structure
- Classification of Market Structure
- Perfect Competition
- Monopoly
- Monopolistic Competition
- Oligopoly
- Duopoly
- Bilateral Monopoly
- Concept of Monopsony
- Other Forms of Market
- Factors Determining Market / Extent of Market
- Demand Curves of Firms under Different Market Forms
- Comparison between different forms of market
Producer's Equilibrium
Equilibrium of Firm and Industry Under Perfect Competition
- Concept of Equilibrium in Economics
- Firm's Equilibrium
- Producer's (Firm's) Equilibrium: Total Revenue and Total Cost Approach
- Producer's (Firm's) Equilibrium: Marginal Revenue and Marginal Cost Approach
- Determination of Short Run Equilibrium of a Firm
- Firm is a Price Taker, Not a Price Maker
- Determination of Long Run Equilibrium of a Firm
- Equilibrium of Industry
- Difference Between Firm and Industry's Equilibrium
Producer's Equilibrium Under Perfect Competition
Determination of Equilibrium Price and Output Under Perfect Competition
- Perfect Competition
- Price Determination Under Perfect Competition
- Changes in Equilibrium
- Effect of Simultaneous change in Demand and Supply on Equilibrium Price
- Time Element in the Theory of Price Determination
- Determination of Equilibrium Prices
- Normal Price and Law of Returns
- Comparison between Market Price and Normal Price
- Practical Applications of Tools of Demand and Supply Analysis
- Determination of Short Run Equilibrium of a Firm
- Determination of Long Run Equilibrium of a Firm
Price Output Determination Under Monopoly
Price Output Determination Under Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
- Imperfect Competition
- Monopolistic Competition
- Equilibrium Price and Output under Monopolistic Competition
- Group Equilibrium in Monopolistic Competition
- Product Differentiation
- Selling Costs
- Oligopoly
- Price and Output Determination under Oligopoly
- Price Rigidity-Sweezy's Kinky Demand Curve Model or Equilibrium under Independent Action
- Cournot's Model
- Collusive Oligopoly
- Mergers
Theory of Income and Employment
- Basic Model of Income Determination
- Aggregate Demand and Its Components
- Propensity to Consume or Consumption Function
- Propensity to Save
- Investment Expenditure
- Determination of Equilibrium Income and Output
- Saving-investment Approach
- Investment Multiplier and Its Mechanism
- Solved Problems on Consumption and Income
- The Concept of Full Employment
- Important Terms of Employment and Unemployment
- Excess Demand
- Deficient Demand
Basic Concepts of Macro Economics
Aggregate Demand and Supply-Determinants of Equilibrium
Consumption Function (Propensity to Consume)
- Propensity to Consume or Consumption Function
- Kinds or Technical Attributes of Propensity to Consume > Average Propensity to Consume
- Kinds or Technical Attributes of Propensity to Consume > Marginal Propensity to Consume
- Propensity to Save
- Determinants of Propensity to Consume
- Psychological Law of Propensity to Consume
- Measures to Raise Propensity to Consume
Concept of Investments-Types and Determinants
Multiplier - I : Static and Dynamic
Full Employment and Voluntary Unemployment
Problems of Deficient Demand and Excess Demand
Measures to Correct Deficient and Excess Demand
Money: Meaning and Functions
Banks: Commercial Bank and Central Bank
- Concept of Bank
- Types of Bank
- Commercial Banks
- Banking > Functions of Commercial Bank
- Credit Creation by Commercial Banks
- Role of Commercial Banks in an Economy
- Central Bank
- Comparison Between Central Bank and Commercial Banks
- Central Bank as a Controller of Credit
- Methods of Credit Control
- Quantitative Methods
- Qualitative (Or Selective) Methods
Balance of Payment and Exchange Rate
- Concept of Balance of Payments
- Features of Balance of Payment
- Balance of Trade and Balance of Payments- Comparison
- Structure of Balance of Payment
- Methods to Measure Balance of Payments
- Components of Balance of Payments
- Current Account Transactions
- Capital Account Transactions
- Balance of Payments Always Balances
- Categories of Balance of Payments
- Balance of Payments Disequilibrium
- Measures to Correct Disequilibrium in the Balance of Payments
- Foreign Exchange Rate
- Exchange Rate
- Types of Foreign Exchange Rate
- Fixed Rate of Exchange
- Flexible Rate of Exchange
- Managed Floating Exchange Rate System
- Determination of Equilibrium Rate of Exchange
- Factors or Determinants of Foreign Exchange Rate
- Concepts of Depreciation, Appreciation, Devaluation and Revaluation
- Determination of Exchange Rate in a Free Market
Fiscal Policy
- Structure of Public Finance > Fiscal Policy
- Public Finance
- Instruments of Fiscal Policy
- Objectives of Fiscal Policy
- Miscellaneous Objectives of Fiscal Policy
- Fiscal Measures for Stabilisation
- Methods of Fiscal Policy in Developing Countries
- Limitations of Fiscal Policy
- Structure of Public Finance > Public Revenue
- Instruments of Fiscal Policy - Taxation
- Types of Taxes
- Tax Reforms in India
- Proportional, Progressive and Regressive Taxes
- Structure of Public Finance > Public Expenditure
- Importance of Public Expenditure
- Structure of Public Finance > Public Debt
- Reasons for Borrowing by the Government
- Public Debt - Redemption
- Deficit Financing
- Fiscal Policy in Action
Government Budget
- Budget
- Types of Budget
- Government Budget
- Need and Importance of Government Budget
- Types of Government Budget in India
- Components (Structure) of the Government Budget
- Modern Classification of Budget
- Classification of Budget Receipts
- Balanced Budget Vs Unbalanced Budget
- Zero-Base Budgeting (ZBB)
- Zero-Base Budgeting in India
- Concepts Related to Budget Deficits
- Constituents of budget /Structure of the budget
- Structure of Public Finance > Public Expenditure
- Revenue Expenditure and Capital Expenditure
- Developmental and Non-developmental Expenditure
- Tax Revenue
- Public Revenue > Non-tax Revenue
- Capital Receipts
- Objectives of Budget
- Significance of Budget
- Types of budget deficit
- Budgetary Procedure
National Income and Circular Flow of Income
- Concept of National Income
- Domestic Income
- National Income Aggregates
- Significance or Importance of National Income
- Circular Flow of Income
- Circular Flow in a Closed Economy
- Circular flow and the Equality between Production, Income and Expenditure
- Circular Flow in a Open Economy
- Economic Sectors of an Economy
- Two-Sector Model without Savings and Investment
- Two-Sector Model with Savings and Investment
- Three-Sector Model of Circular Flow of Income
- Four-Sector Model of Circular Flow of Income
- Significance or Importance of Circular Flow of Income
National Income Aggregates
- Key Relationships Among National Income Aggregates
- National Income Aggregates
- Gross Domestic Product at Market Price
- Gross National Product at Market Price
- Constituents of GNP
- Net Domestic Product at Market Price
- Difference between Net Domestic and Net National Product at Market Price
- Net National Product (NNP)
- Difference between Net National and Gross National Product at Market Price
- Net National Income or Product at Factor Cost
- Net Domestic Product or Income at Factor Cost
- Difference between Net Domestic Product at Factor Cost and Net Domestic Product at Market Price
- Gross Domestic Product or Income at Factor Cost
- Gross National Product at Factor Cost
- Factor Income from Net Domestic Product accuring to Private Sector
- Private Income
- Difference between National and Private Income
- Personal Income of National Income
- Difference between Private and Personal Income
- Disposable Income Aggregates
- Per Capita Income
- Real Income
- Interrelationship among National Income Aggregates
- Real GDP and Nominal GDP
- Gross Domestic Product (National Income) and Economic Welfare
Methods of Measuring National Income
- Concept of National Income
- Methods of Measurement of National Income
- Net Product or Value Added Method
- Precautions in the Estimation of National Income by Value-added Method
- Difficulties in the Estimation of National Income by Value-added Method
- Income Method
- Expenditure Method
- Precautions in the Estimation of National Income by Expenditure Method
- Alternative Methods of National Income Estimation
- Reconciling The Three Methods Of Estimating National Income
- The Identity of Output, Income and Expenditure
- Transactions Included in National Income
- Components of Net National Product at Factor Cost in its Three Phases
- Transactions not Included in National Income
- Significance of three Methods
- Numericals on Income, Product and Expenditure Method
National Income and Economic Welfare
- Welfare Economics
- Definitions of Welfare Economics
- Factors Determining the Size of National Income
- National Income and National Welfare
- Relation between Economic Welfare and National Income
- National Income as a Measure of Economic Welfare
- Causes of Slow Growth of National Income
- Suggestions for Increasing National Income
- Quantitative (General) Methods of Credit Control
- Qualitative (Selective) Methods of Credit Control
- Monetary Policy During Depression (Deflationary Gap)
- Monetary Policy During Inflation (Inflationary Gap)
- Cheap Money Policy vs. Dear Money Policy
- Key Points: Instruments of Monetary Policy
Quantitative (General) Methods of Credit Control
1. Bank Rate (Discount Rate)
The rate at which the RBI lends money to commercial banks or discounts (buys) their bills.
How it works — step by step:
- To control INFLATION (↑ Raise Bank Rate):
RBI raises bank rate → Banks pay more to borrow from RBI → Banks raise their own interest rates → People and businesses borrow less → Less money in circulation → Credit decreases → Inflation is controlled - To fight DEPRESSION (↓ Lower Bank Rate):
RBI lowers bank rate → Banks pay less to borrow → Banks reduce interest rates → People borrow more → More money in circulation → Credit increases → Economy revives
Analogy: Think of RBI as a wholesale supplier. If the wholesale price (bank rate) goes up, the shopkeeper (bank) charges you more too. If it falls, prices at the counter fall as well.
2. Open Market Operations (OMO)
The RBI buys or sells government securities (bonds/treasury bills) in the open market.
How it works — step by step:
- To control INFLATION (Sell Securities):
RBI sells securities → Public buys them by withdrawing money from banks → Bank deposits fall → Banks have less money to lend → Credit decreases → Money supply falls → Inflation is controlled - To fight DEPRESSION (Buy Securities):
RBI buys securities → Public gets cash → Bank deposits rise → Banks have more to lend → Credit increases → More spending → Economy revives
Analogy: Selling securities is like draining water from a tank (the economy). Buying securities is like refilling the tank.
3. Variable Reserve Ratio (CRR — Cash Reserve Ratio)
Every commercial bank must keep a fixed percentage of its total deposits as cash with the RBI — this amount cannot be used for lending.
How it works — step by step:
- To control INFLATION (↑ Raise CRR):
RBI raises CRR → Banks must park more cash with RBI → Less money available to lend → Credit-creating capacity falls → Money supply shrinks → Inflation is checked - To fight DEPRESSION (↓ Lower CRR):
RBI lowers CRR → Banks need to park less with RBI → More money available to lend → Credit increases → Spending rises → Economy picks up
Example with numbers:
A bank has total deposits of ₹1,00,000.
- If CRR = 5% → Bank keeps ₹5,000 with RBI → Can lend ₹95,000
- If CRR is raised to 10% → Bank keeps ₹10,000 with RBI → Can lend only ₹90,000
Analogy: CRR is like the government telling a shopkeeper: "You must lock away 10% of your stock — you cannot sell it." The more that is locked, the less can be sold (lent).
4. Liquidity Ratio (SLR — Statutory Liquidity Ratio)
Every bank must maintain a fixed percentage of its deposits as liquid assets (cash, gold, or government-approved securities) with itself, not with the RBI.
How it works:
- ↑ Raise SLR → Banks must hold more liquid assets → Less available to lend → Money supply decreases
- ↓ Lower SLR → Banks hold less → More available to lend → Money supply increases
Qualitative (Selective) Methods of Credit Control
1. Change in Margin Requirement
When someone takes a loan against goods or assets as security, they cannot borrow the full value — the difference between the market value of the security and the loan amount is called the margin.
Example: Goods worth ₹1,000 are pledged as security. Margin = 20% (₹200). So loan = ₹800. If the RBI raises the margin to 40%, the borrower receives only ₹600 for the same goods.
How it works:
- ↑ Raise Margin → Borrowers get less loan for the same security → Discourages borrowing → Money supply falls (used during Inflation)
- ↓ Lower Margin → Borrowers get more loans for the same security → Encourages borrowing → Money supply rises (used during the Depression)
2. Regulation of Consumer Credit
RBI controls how easily consumers can borrow for purchases through hire purchase or installment (EMI) schemes.
- During Inflation: Down payments are raised, installment periods shortened → People spend less → Demand cools
- During Depression: More liberal credit terms → People spend more → Demand revives
Real-life example: If the rules for buying a phone on EMI become stricter (higher down payment), fewer people buy → demand for phones falls.
3. Direct Action
RBI takes strict action against commercial banks that do not follow its credit control directions.
RBI can take direct action by:
- Refusing rediscount facilities to non-compliant banks
- Restricting accommodation to banks that have over-borrowed relative to their capital
- Charging penal (extra-high) interest rates above the normal bank rate
- Imposing other stricter operational restrictions on the defaulting bank
4. Rationing of Credit
RBI fixes a ceiling or limit on the total credit it provides to commercial banks or to specific industries.
RBI can ration credit in four ways:
- Refuse to give any loan to a particular bank
- Reduce the total amount of loans given to banks
- Fix a quota — set a maximum credit limit overall
- Cap credit for specific sectors — e.g., limit loans to real estate or commodity traders
5. Moral Suasion (Moral Persuasion)
RBI informally advises and persuades commercial banks to follow a particular credit policy — there is no force or penalty involved.
- Takes two forms: Directives (written guidance) and Publicity (publishing reports)
- Effectiveness depends on the prestige of RBI and the willingness of banks to cooperate
- This is the softest credit control tool
Analogy: It's like a respected teacher advising students — no marks are deducted for ignoring the advice, but most students listen because of the teacher's authority.
6. Publicity
RBI publishes reports, bulletins, and journals to make banks and the public aware of economic conditions and the type of credit policy needed.
- Puts banks under pressure from public opinion
- Informs the banking community about what the RBI considers healthy for the economy
- Works alongside moral suasion as an indirect tool
Monetary Policy During Depression (Deflationary Gap)
Problem: Demand is too low → Prices are falling → Unemployment is rising
Solution: Cheap Money Policy — make credit easy and affordable
Monetary Policy During Inflation (Inflationary Gap)
Problem: Demand is too high → Prices are rising → Economy overheating
Solution: Dear Money Policy — make credit scarce and expensive
Cheap Money Policy vs. Dear Money Policy
| Feature | Cheap Money Policy | Dear Money Policy |
|---|---|---|
| Also called | Easy money / Expansionary | Tight money / Contractionary |
| Used when | Depression / Deflation | Inflation / Excess demand |
| Interest rates | ↓ Low | ↑ High |
| Credit availability | Easy and abundant | Scarce and costly |
| Effect on borrowing | Encouraged | Discouraged |
| Effect on spending | Increases | Decreases |
| Bank Rate | Reduced | Increased |
| CRR / SLR | Reduced | Raised |
| Open Market Operations | Buy securities | Sell securities |
| Goal | Revive the economy | Cool down the economy |
Key Points: Instruments of Monetary Policy
- Quantitative tools control the total amount of credit — they affect everyone equally.
- Qualitative tools control the direction of credit — they target specific sectors or borrowers.
- The four main quantitative tools are: Bank Rate, OMO, CRR, and SLR.
- Margin requirements are especially effective in curbing speculation and hoarding in commodities markets.
- Moral suasion relies on persuasion, not force — it is the softest tool available to the RBI.
- Cheap money policy fights deflation by making borrowing easy.
- Dear money policy fights inflation by making borrowing expensive.
