HOW INDIA’S CREDIT SYSTEM BLUNTS RBI POLICY IMPACT
HOW INDIA’S CREDIT SYSTEM BLUNTS RBI POLICY IMPACT
Introduction
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) undertakes monetary policy actions, such as repo rate and CRR changes, to influence borrowing costs and stimulate economic activity. However, the Indian credit system’s structural segmentation often impedes effective transmission of these policies across all sectors.
Dual-Track Transmission: Administered vs Market Track
1. Administered Track
-
Operates through repo-linked bank lending, primarily via public sector banks.
-
Transmission is partial and delayed due to internal liquidity positions, risk assessments, and sluggish lending behaviour.
2. Market Track
-
Works via bond markets—captured by instruments like T-bill yields.
-
Benefits accrue mainly to listed, investment-grade firms with institutional ties.
-
Even during easing cycles, bond issuance remains modest due to macroeconomic risks, narrow investor base, and limited risk appetite.
Institutional Segmentation: The Root Cause
India’s financial system is segmented along structural and institutional lines:
1. Lending Bias Towards Collateral
-
Overdependence on secured loans disproportionately favours firms with real assets.
-
MSMEs and unlisted promoter-driven firms face barriers to credit, regardless of repo rate changes.
2. Uneven Access Based on Firm Type
-
Listed firms: Can shift between bank and market-based funding based on borrowing costs.
-
Unlisted firms and MSMEs: Rely on bank loans, relationship-based credit, often with conservative documentation and rigid standards.
3. Group Affiliations and Promoter Control
-
Group-affiliated entities can leverage reputational capital and existing networks.
-
Standalone firms must rely on traditional lending filters—primarily collateral and compliance, not innovation or potential.
Data: A Quantitative Reflection
-
Bank credit to private sector: 56% of GDP.
-
Banks account for 70% of corporate borrowing—indicating persistent reliance on secured credit.
-
Less than 15% of rated firms issue bonds regularly.
-
Fewer than 400 manufacturing firms are active in the bond market.
This limited bond market participation weakens the efficacy of RBI’s monetary stance.
Implications for Monetary Policy Effectiveness
1. Blunted Repo Rate Transmission
-
RBI’s 50 bps rate cut translated to just a 27 bps drop in fresh rupee loan rates.
-
Monetary easing does not reach MSMEs or underserved sectors effectively.
2. Selective Benefits
-
Equity markets and short-term debt traders gain quickly.
-
Broader credit conditions, especially in MSME and informal sectors, remain largely unchanged.
The Way Forward: Structural Over Cyclical Solutions
1. Deepening the Corporate Bond Market
-
Simplify issuance procedures.
-
Expand investor participation.
-
Strengthen secondary market infrastructure.
-
Enforce SEBI mandates (e.g., 25% market borrowing for large firms).
2. Encouraging Fintech and Alternative Lenders
-
Use alternative data and tech-enabled platforms for faster credit delivery.
-
Expand access for credit-invisible borrowers, especially MSMEs.
-
Require regulatory clarity and support to scale operations.
3. Shift Towards Unsecured, Reputation-Based Lending
-
Promote risk-based, rather than collateral-based, assessment.
-
Enable MSMEs with strong governance and growth potential to access capital.
-
Avoid reckless lending, but diversify beyond asset-backed credit models.
Conclusion
India’s fragmented credit ecosystem—defined by overreliance on collateral, limited bond market participation, and institutional segmentation—limits the effectiveness of monetary policy. While the RBI’s rate cuts reflect intent, their impact remains muted for most firms. Structural reforms are essential to bridge this disconnect and democratize access to affordable credit.
For classes, materials, test series and mentorship – contact us at +91 6366-294954
