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General Economy and Banking Awareness

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General Knowledge General Economy and Banking Awareness Competitive Exams

General Economy and Banking Awareness is a practical and exam-oriented chapter that focuses on how money, banking institutions, credit, digital payments, financial markets, regulators, interest rates, customer safety, external trade and financial inclusion work in the modern economy. This chapter is intentionally different from the broader Indian Economy chapter by giving more weight to banking operations, RBI functions, financial products, digital finance, customer awareness and current financial terminology.

Chapter positioning: The Indian Economy chapter may cover planning, poverty, unemployment, inflation, budget, taxation, national income and economic reforms in depth. This chapter should be used as a complementary chapter for banking awareness, applied economy, financial institutions and practical financial literacy.

What is General Economy and Banking Awareness?

General Economy and Banking Awareness refers to the practical understanding of money, savings, deposits, loans, interest rates, banking services, payment systems, financial institutions, regulators and financial markets. It helps students understand how financial activity supports economic growth, personal finance, business activity and government policy.

In competitive exams, this chapter is especially useful because many questions are not purely theoretical. They test whether the student understands terms such as repo rate, CRR, SLR, NPA, UPI, NEFT, RTGS, KYC, EMI, overdraft, financial inclusion, money market, capital market, RBI, SEBI, IRDAI, NABARD and SIDBI.

This chapter should be studied with a practical mindset. For example, when learning about banks, understand how a bank accepts deposits, lends money, earns interest, manages risk and protects customers. When learning about RBI, understand how it influences inflation, liquidity, credit and the stability of banks.

Simple idea: Economy tells us how resources and income move. Banking awareness tells us how money, savings, loans and payments move through financial institutions.
Area Meaning Exam Focus
Banking System Network of institutions that accept deposits, provide loans and facilitate payments. RBI, commercial banks, deposits, loans, NPA
Financial System System that connects savers, borrowers, investors, markets and regulators. Banks, markets, insurance, pension, regulators
Monetary Awareness Understanding money supply, liquidity, credit and interest-rate tools. Repo rate, CRR, SLR, OMO, inflation control
Digital Finance Use of technology for payments, banking and financial services. UPI, NEFT, RTGS, IMPS, QR, fintech
Financial Markets Markets where securities, debt instruments and financial assets are traded. Money market, capital market, shares, bonds
Financial Inclusion Affordable access to banking, savings, credit, insurance, pension and payments. Bank accounts, DBT, microfinance, priority sector
External Sector Trade, foreign exchange, imports, exports and global financial flows. FDI, FPI, forex, exchange rate, trade deficit
Customer Protection Safe banking practices and protection from frauds and misuse. KYC, OTP, phishing, grievance redressal

“Banking awareness is not just about banks. It is about money, credit, risk, regulation, payments, customer safety and financial discipline.”

Exam Preparation Tip
Differentiated focus areas
  • RBI and central banking functions
  • Monetary policy tools
  • Commercial banking operations
  • Deposits, loans, EMI, collateral and NPA
  • Digital banking and payment systems
  • Financial regulators and institutions
  • Money market and capital market
  • External sector and forex awareness
  • Customer protection and fraud prevention
  • Financial inclusion and priority sector lending
RBI Repo NPA UPI SEBI Forex

How This Chapter is Different from Indian Economy

A student may confuse this chapter with Indian Economy because both use words such as GDP, inflation, budget, banks and money. However, the learning objective is different. Indian Economy is broader and macro-oriented. This chapter is more banking, finance, institution and application oriented.

Indian Economy Chapter General Economy and Banking Awareness Chapter
Explains the structure and nature of Indian economy. Explains the practical working of banks and financial institutions.
Covers planning, poverty, unemployment and welfare in detail. Covers accounts, deposits, loans, NPA, EMI and banking products.
Focuses on budget, taxation, fiscal policy and economic reforms. Focuses on RBI, monetary policy tools, liquidity and credit control.
Explains economic sectors, growth and development. Explains regulators, payment systems, markets and customer safety.
Macro-economic and development-oriented. Applied financial-awareness and exam-term oriented.
Use in website: Keep Indian Economy as a macro chapter. Use this chapter as a banking-awareness and financial-literacy chapter.
Visual Understanding: Applied Financial Awareness Map
Applied Financial Awareness Banks RBI Tools Payments Markets Customer Safety Regulators External Sector Exam questions connect money, credit, payments, regulation, markets, risk and customer awareness
The chapter is designed as a practical map of financial systems rather than a general economy theory chapter.

Reserve Bank of India and Central Banking Awareness

The Reserve Bank of India is India’s central bank. It is not an ordinary commercial bank for the public. It manages monetary policy, regulates banks, issues currency notes, supports payment systems, manages liquidity and works for financial stability.

RBI-related questions in exams are usually function-based. Students should know what RBI does, how RBI influences credit, how it regulates banks, and how monetary policy tools affect liquidity and interest rates.

RBI Function Meaning Exam Clue
Monetary Authority Controls money supply, credit conditions and policy rates. Repo rate, inflation, liquidity
Currency Issuer Responsible for issue and management of currency notes. Currency management
Banker to Government Handles banking transactions of government. Government accounts and debt management
Banker’s Bank Maintains reserves of banks and provides liquidity support. CRR, lender of last resort
Banking Regulator Regulates and supervises banks and certain financial entities. Licensing, inspection, prudential norms
Payment System Overseer Supports safety and efficiency of payment systems. NEFT, RTGS, digital payments ecosystem
Financial Stability Role Monitors risks and works to protect stability of financial system. Banking stress, liquidity, systemic risk
Simple memory: RBI is connected with money, currency, banks, liquidity, interest rates, payment systems and financial stability.

Monetary Policy Tools

Monetary policy is the policy used by the central bank to influence money supply, credit flow, interest rates and inflation. In exams, monetary policy tools are among the most frequently tested banking-awareness topics.

Tool Meaning Effect / Use
Repo Rate Rate at which RBI lends short-term funds to banks against eligible securities. Influences bank borrowing cost and lending rates
Reverse Repo Rate Rate at which RBI absorbs surplus funds from banks. Used to absorb liquidity
CRR Cash Reserve Ratio; part of bank deposits kept as cash reserve with RBI. Controls lendable resources of banks
SLR Statutory Liquidity Ratio; part of deposits maintained in approved liquid assets. Ensures liquidity and safety
OMO Open Market Operations; RBI buys or sells government securities. Injects or absorbs liquidity
MSF Marginal Standing Facility; overnight borrowing facility for banks. Emergency liquidity support
Bank Rate Central bank lending-rate concept used in monetary framework. Exam term linked with central bank lending
Liquidity Adjustment Facility Framework used by RBI to manage short-term liquidity. Repo and reverse repo operations
Exam trap: CRR is cash kept with RBI. SLR is liquid assets maintained by banks. Repo means RBI lends to banks. Reverse repo means banks park funds with RBI.
How Monetary Policy Affects Common People
  • Policy rates influence lending rates of banks.
  • Loan EMIs may become costlier or cheaper depending on rate movements.
  • Deposit interest rates may also change over time.
  • Credit availability affects business expansion and investment.
  • Liquidity conditions affect banks’ ability to lend.
  • Inflation control protects purchasing power.
  • Rate decisions can influence housing loans, vehicle loans and business loans.
RBI Terms Often Asked in Exams
  • Liquidity: Availability of money or easily usable funds.
  • Credit: Borrowed money or loan facility.
  • Policy Rate: Interest-rate tool used by central bank.
  • Inflation Targeting: Framework for price stability.
  • Lender of Last Resort: Central bank support to banks in stress.
  • Prudential Norms: Rules for safe banking operations.
  • Financial Stability: Smooth functioning of financial system.
Visual Understanding: Monetary Policy Flow
RBI Policy Bank Rates Loans & EMIs Demand & Prices Monetary policy affects bank rates, loans, credit demand and inflation conditions
This flow helps students connect RBI policy decisions with practical banking and household impact.

Commercial Banking Operations

Commercial banks are financial institutions that accept deposits, provide loans, enable payments, issue cards, support businesses, maintain customer accounts and help channel savings into productive credit. They act as intermediaries between people who save money and people or businesses that need money.

Banking-awareness questions often test the difference between account types, deposit types, loan types, demand deposits, term deposits, overdraft, cash credit, collateral, NPA and EMI.

Banking Product Meaning Exam Focus
Savings Account Account mainly used by individuals for savings and daily transactions. Demand deposit, interest, withdrawal
Current Account Account mainly used by businesses for frequent transactions. Business account, overdraft, no savings-style use
Fixed Deposit Money deposited for a fixed period at agreed interest rate. Term deposit, maturity, premature withdrawal
Recurring Deposit Regular fixed instalment deposited periodically for a fixed tenure. Regular saving habit
Demand Deposit Deposit withdrawable on demand. Savings and current accounts
Term Deposit Deposit kept for fixed tenure. FD and RD
Overdraft Facility to withdraw more than balance up to approved limit. Current accounts and business finance
Cash Credit Working capital borrowing facility against stocks or receivables. Business and MSME finance
Simple memory: Savings and current accounts are demand deposits. Fixed and recurring deposits are term deposits.

Loans, Collateral and Credit Risk

A loan is money borrowed from a bank or financial institution and repaid with interest. The bank checks the borrower’s income, repayment capacity, credit history, collateral and purpose of loan. Banking exams often ask the meaning of loan-related terms.

Term Meaning Example / Exam Use
Principal Original amount borrowed or deposited. Loan amount or deposit amount
Interest Cost of borrowing or return on deposit. Loan interest, FD interest
EMI Equated Monthly Instalment paid by borrower. Home loan, vehicle loan
Collateral Security pledged by borrower against loan. House, land, gold, vehicle
Credit Risk Risk that borrower may not repay the loan. Loan appraisal and monitoring
NPA Loan that stops generating income for bank as per regulatory norms. Problem loan
Provisioning Amount set aside by bank for possible loan loss. Risk management
Credit Score Numerical indication of borrower’s credit behaviour. Loan eligibility
Exam shortcut: NPA is a problem loan. Provisioning is money kept aside for possible loss.
Mortgage, Hypothecation, Pledge and Lien
Term Meaning Example
Mortgage Security over immovable property. Home loan, land loan
Hypothecation Security over movable asset, usually with borrower retaining possession. Vehicle loan
Pledge Security where possession of asset is usually with lender. Gold loan
Lien Right to retain property or money until dues are cleared. Banker’s lien
Memory: Mortgage = immovable property; Hypothecation = movable asset; Pledge = possession with lender.
Common Loan Categories
  • Home Loan: Loan for purchase or construction of house.
  • Vehicle Loan: Loan for purchase of car, bike or commercial vehicle.
  • Education Loan: Loan for educational expenses.
  • Personal Loan: Unsecured loan for personal needs.
  • Agriculture Loan: Loan for farming and allied activities.
  • MSME Loan: Loan for micro, small and medium enterprises.
  • Gold Loan: Loan against pledged gold ornaments or assets.
  • Working Capital Loan: Loan for day-to-day business operations.
Visual Understanding: Bank as Financial Intermediary
Depositors Bank Risk + Liquidity Borrowers Deposits Loans Banks convert public savings into productive credit while managing repayment risk
This is the core banking function: mobilize deposits, lend responsibly and manage risk.

Digital Banking, Fintech and Payment Systems

Digital banking allows customers to access banking services without visiting a branch. It includes mobile banking, internet banking, ATMs, cards, UPI, QR payments, wallets, payment apps and online account services. Fintech means the use of technology to provide financial services in a faster, simpler and often cheaper way.

Digital payment questions are now very important because exams frequently test terms such as UPI, NEFT, RTGS, IMPS, QR code, debit card, credit card, wallet, tokenization, OTP, PIN and phishing.

Payment System Meaning Exam Focus
UPI Unified Payments Interface for instant bank-to-bank transfers using mobile platforms. VPA, QR, mobile payment, instant transfer
NEFT Electronic fund transfer system between bank accounts. Bank transfer, electronic settlement
RTGS Real Time Gross Settlement for high-value transfers. Real-time settlement, large-value payment
IMPS Immediate Payment Service for quick fund transfers. Instant transfer service
Debit Card Card that uses money available in customer’s bank account. Pay now
Credit Card Card that allows spending on credit up to a sanctioned limit. Pay later, billing cycle, credit limit
QR Payment Payment made by scanning a merchant or person’s QR code. UPI QR, merchant payment
Mobile Wallet Digital wallet used to store and transfer money electronically. Prepaid payment instrument
Shortcut: Debit card = account money. Credit card = borrowed credit limit. UPI = instant mobile bank-to-bank transfer.
Fintech Areas to Know
  • Digital Payments: UPI, wallets, QR payments and cards.
  • Digital Lending: Loan applications and credit approval using digital platforms.
  • Insurtech: Technology-enabled insurance services.
  • Wealthtech: Online investment and wealth management platforms.
  • Regtech: Technology used for compliance and regulation.
  • Banking Apps: Mobile-based account and transaction services.
  • Credit Scoring: Use of data to assess borrower risk.
  • Cybersecurity: Protection of digital financial systems.
Digital Banking Safety
  • Never share OTP, PIN, CVV, password or UPI PIN.
  • Do not click suspicious banking or prize-related links.
  • Do not install screen-sharing apps on unknown person’s request.
  • Always verify receiver name before confirming payment.
  • Use official bank apps and websites.
  • Report unauthorized transactions immediately.
  • Keep mobile number and email updated with bank.
  • Use device lock, app lock and strong passwords.

Common Digital Banking Frauds

Fraud Type Meaning Protection Tip
Phishing Fake websites, emails or links used to steal credentials. Do not click unknown links.
Vishing Fraud calls asking for OTP, PIN or account details. Banks do not ask for OTP or PIN.
Smishing Fraud through SMS links or fake messages. Do not open suspicious SMS links.
QR Code Fraud Tricking users into making payment while pretending to receive money. Scanning QR usually means payment, not receiving money.
Remote Access Fraud Fraudster controls device using remote app. Do not install apps on unknown person’s instruction.
Fake Customer Care Fraud Fake helpline numbers used to steal banking information. Use official website or app for support.
Safety rule: OTP, PIN, CVV and passwords are never to be shared with anyone.
Visual Understanding: Digital Payment Flow
Customer Payment App Bank / Network Merchant Digital payments require convenience, authentication, settlement and customer safety
Payment-system questions usually test mode, speed, safety, purpose and customer protection.

Financial Institutions, Regulators and Markets

The financial system includes institutions, regulators, markets and instruments. A regulator supervises a specific part of the financial system to protect customers, maintain fairness, reduce risk and ensure orderly development of the sector.

Regulator-based questions are very common in banking and general awareness exams. Students should remember which regulator is connected with banking, securities, insurance, pension, rural finance, MSME finance and export-import finance.

Institution / Regulator Main Role Memory Shortcut
RBI Central bank, monetary authority and banking regulator. Money, banks, currency, payment systems
SEBI Regulates securities and capital markets. Shares, mutual funds, stock market
IRDAI Regulates insurance sector. Life insurance, general insurance
PFRDA Regulates pension sector. Pension and retirement products
NABARD Supports agriculture and rural development finance. Rural credit, agriculture, cooperative support
SIDBI Supports MSME finance and development. Small industries and MSME
EXIM Bank Supports export-import finance. International trade finance
NPCI Operates retail payment systems and platforms. UPI, RuPay, digital payments
Exam shortcut: RBI = banks; SEBI = securities; IRDAI = insurance; PFRDA = pension; NABARD = rural; SIDBI = MSME; EXIM Bank = foreign trade finance.

Financial Markets and Instruments

Financial markets help companies, governments and institutions raise funds. They also give investors a platform to invest savings. The most common distinction is between money market and capital market.

Market / Instrument Meaning Exam Use
Money Market Market for short-term funds and instruments. Treasury bills, call money, commercial paper
Capital Market Market for long-term funds and securities. Shares, bonds, debentures
Primary Market Market where securities are issued for the first time. IPO, fresh issue
Secondary Market Market where existing securities are traded. Stock exchange trading
Share Unit of ownership in a company. Equity, shareholder, dividend
Bond Debt instrument used to borrow money. Interest, maturity, issuer
Debenture Debt instrument issued by a company. Company borrowing
Mutual Fund Pooled investment managed by professionals. NAV, units, fund manager, risk
IPO Initial Public Offer; first sale of shares to the public. Primary market
Dividend Share of profit distributed to shareholders. Equity return
Simple memory: Money market is short term. Capital market is long term. Primary market is new issue. Secondary market is resale.
Insurance Awareness
  • Insurance: Risk protection in return for premium.
  • Premium: Amount paid to buy insurance cover.
  • Policyholder: Person who owns the insurance policy.
  • Nominee: Person nominated to receive benefit.
  • Sum Assured: Guaranteed amount under policy terms.
  • Claim: Request for payment after insured event.
  • Life Insurance: Covers life risk.
  • General Insurance: Covers non-life risk such as health, vehicle and property.
Pension and Retirement Awareness
  • Pension: Income support after retirement or old age.
  • Retirement Planning: Saving and investing for future income security.
  • Contribution: Amount invested periodically for retirement.
  • Annuity: Regular income paid from accumulated retirement corpus.
  • Pension Regulator: PFRDA is associated with pension regulation.
  • Social Security: Financial protection for old age and vulnerable groups.
  • Long-Term Savings: Retirement products encourage disciplined savings.

External Sector and Applied Economy Indicators

The external sector connects the domestic economy with the global economy through trade, foreign exchange, capital flows, imports, exports, foreign investment and exchange-rate movements. In banking and financial awareness, students should know the basic meaning and practical impact of external-sector terms.

External Sector Term Meaning Exam Focus
Export Goods or services sold to another country. Earns foreign exchange
Import Goods or services purchased from another country. Uses foreign exchange
Trade Deficit Imports exceed exports. External trade imbalance
Foreign Exchange Foreign currency used in international transactions. Forex reserves, exchange rate
Exchange Rate Price of one currency in terms of another currency. Rupee-dollar movement
Balance of Payments Record of all economic transactions with rest of the world. Current account, capital account
FDI Foreign Direct Investment in business or assets. Long-term direct business investment
FPI Foreign Portfolio Investment in securities. Shares, bonds, market flows
Remittance Money sent by people working abroad to their home country. Foreign exchange inflow
Forex Reserves Foreign currency assets held by central bank. External stability and import cover
Simple memory: Export brings foreign exchange. Import uses foreign exchange. Trade deficit means imports are greater than exports.

Applied Economy Indicators for Banking Awareness

Some economic indicators are important because they affect banks, customers, businesses, investors and government policy. Students should study these indicators through their practical impact, not only through definitions.

Indicator Meaning Practical Impact
Inflation General rise in prices. Reduces purchasing power and affects interest-rate policy.
Interest Rate Cost of borrowing or return on saving. Affects loans, deposits, EMIs and investment decisions.
Liquidity Availability of money or cash-like funds. Affects credit flow and financial stability.
Credit Growth Increase in loans given by banks. Shows borrowing, consumption and investment activity.
Bond Yield Return earned on bonds. Affects borrowing cost and market expectations.
Exchange Rate Value of domestic currency against foreign currency. Affects imports, exports, travel, oil prices and inflation.
Forex Reserves Foreign currency assets held by central bank. Supports external stability and confidence.
Current Account Deficit Excess of foreign payments over foreign receipts on current account. External sector pressure indicator.
Exam approach: Learn each indicator by definition, direction and effect. Example: higher inflation may influence interest rates and purchasing power.
Visual Understanding: External Sector Flow
Domestic Economy World Economy Exports / FDI / Remittances Imports / Payments / Capital Outflow External sector links trade, forex, exchange rate, global investment and financial stability
External-sector questions often connect foreign trade, forex reserves, exchange rates, FDI and FPI.

Financial Inclusion, Priority Sector and Social Banking

Financial inclusion means providing affordable and useful financial services to all sections of society, especially low-income groups, rural households, small businesses, farmers, women, workers and financially underserved communities.

Financial inclusion is not limited to opening bank accounts. It includes savings, credit, insurance, pension, remittance, digital payments, financial literacy and access to government benefits.

Inclusion Area Meaning Importance
Bank Account Access Opening and using bank accounts. Formal saving and transaction record
Credit Access Availability of affordable loans. Supports livelihood, farming and small business
Insurance Access Protection against risks at affordable cost. Reduces vulnerability
Pension Access Retirement or old-age income support. Social security
Digital Access Use of mobile and digital payments. Convenience and direct transfer
Financial Literacy Knowledge of safe and responsible financial behaviour. Prevents fraud and improves money management
Simple memory: Financial inclusion = account + credit + insurance + pension + payment access + financial literacy.

Priority Sector Lending

Priority Sector Lending refers to lending by banks to sectors considered important for inclusive and balanced economic development. It helps direct formal credit to agriculture, small businesses, weaker sections and other priority areas.

Priority Area Purpose Exam Relevance
Agriculture Credit support to farmers and allied activities. Rural credit, crop loans
MSME Credit support to micro, small and medium enterprises. Employment and entrepreneurship
Education Loans for education and skill development. Human capital
Housing Affordable housing finance support. Social infrastructure
Weaker Sections Credit support to disadvantaged groups. Inclusive finance
Renewable Energy Support for clean energy projects. Sustainable development
Exam approach: Priority sector questions usually test purpose, beneficiaries and link with inclusive development.
Direct Benefit Transfer and Social Banking
  • DBT: Direct transfer of government benefits to beneficiary bank accounts.
  • Purpose: Reduce leakage and improve transparency.
  • Bank Account: Helps receive subsidies and benefits directly.
  • Digital Payments: Help beneficiaries access money quickly.
  • Financial Literacy: Helps beneficiaries use services safely.
  • Social Banking: Banking aimed at inclusive and welfare-oriented development.
Microfinance and Self-Help Groups
  • Microfinance: Small loans and financial services to low-income groups.
  • SHG: Self-Help Group formed by members for savings and credit support.
  • Purpose: Promote livelihood, savings habit and self-employment.
  • Women Empowerment: SHGs often support women-led financial participation.
  • Small Credit: Helps people start or expand small activities.
  • Financial Discipline: Regular savings and repayment habits are encouraged.

High-Yield Revision Bank

This chapter should be revised as a set of practical mappings: institution to function, product to use, regulator to sector, payment system to purpose, and financial term to meaning. The following revision blocks are designed for last-minute exam preparation.

RBI and Monetary Tools
  • RBI - central bank
  • Repo rate - RBI lends to banks
  • Reverse repo - RBI absorbs funds
  • CRR - cash reserve with RBI
  • SLR - approved liquid assets
  • OMO - buying/selling government securities
  • MSF - overnight liquidity support
  • Liquidity - availability of money
Banking Operations
  • Savings account - individual savings and transactions
  • Current account - business transactions
  • FD - fixed period deposit
  • RD - regular instalment deposit
  • EMI - monthly loan instalment
  • NPA - problem loan
  • KYC - customer identification
  • Collateral - security against loan
Digital Finance
  • UPI - instant mobile payment
  • NEFT - electronic transfer
  • RTGS - real-time high-value settlement
  • IMPS - immediate payment service
  • Debit card - pay from account
  • Credit card - pay later
  • QR payment - scan and pay
  • OTP - transaction authentication
Regulators
  • RBI - banking and monetary system
  • SEBI - securities market
  • IRDAI - insurance sector
  • PFRDA - pension sector
  • NABARD - agriculture and rural finance
  • SIDBI - MSME finance
  • EXIM Bank - export-import finance
  • NPCI - retail payment systems
Financial Markets
  • Money market - short-term funds
  • Capital market - long-term funds
  • Primary market - new issue
  • Secondary market - existing securities
  • Share - ownership unit
  • Bond - debt instrument
  • IPO - first public issue
  • Dividend - profit distributed to shareholders
External Sector
  • Export - sale to foreign country
  • Import - purchase from foreign country
  • Trade deficit - imports exceed exports
  • Forex - foreign exchange
  • Exchange rate - currency value comparison
  • FDI - direct foreign investment
  • FPI - portfolio investment
  • Remittance - money sent from abroad

Common Types of Exam Questions

Definition Questions

These ask the meaning of financial terms.

  • What is CRR?
  • What is NPA?
  • What is KYC?
  • What is EMI?
Difference Questions

These compare similar terms.

  • CRR vs SLR
  • Debit card vs credit card
  • FDI vs FPI
  • Money market vs capital market
Institution Mapping

These ask regulator or institution functions.

  • RBI - banking
  • SEBI - securities
  • IRDAI - insurance
  • NABARD - rural finance
Application Questions

These test practical understanding.

  • Which payment mode is instant?
  • Which card uses account balance?
  • What should not be shared?
  • What happens when imports exceed exports?
Exam approach: First identify the category of the question: definition, difference, institution, payment mode, customer safety, market type or external-sector term.

Practice

A) Multiple Choice Questions
  1. CRR means:
    Cash Reserve Ratio Credit Return Rate Capital Reserve Receipt Cash Revenue Ratio
  2. SEBI mainly regulates:
    Securities market Insurance sector Pension sector Currency issue
  3. Debit card uses:
    Bank account balance Borrowed credit limit Insurance claim Mutual fund units
  4. Trade deficit occurs when:
    Imports exceed exports Exports exceed imports Taxes exceed spending Savings exceed loans
  5. Mortgage is related to:
    Immovable property Only cash Only shares Only insurance
  6. UPI is mainly used for:
    Instant digital payments Issuing currency Insurance regulation Pension regulation
B) Higher-Order Questions
  1. Differentiate between CRR and SLR. (Hint: Cash reserve with RBI versus approved liquid assets.)
  2. Explain the difference between debit card and credit card. (Hint: Pay from account versus pay later.)
  3. Match RBI, SEBI, IRDAI, PFRDA, NABARD and SIDBI with their sectors. (Hint: Banking, securities, insurance, pension, rural finance, MSME.)
  4. Explain why digital banking safety is important. (Hint: OTP, PIN, phishing, unauthorized transactions.)
  5. Differentiate between FDI and FPI. (Hint: Direct business investment versus portfolio securities investment.)
  6. Explain how financial inclusion supports economic development. (Hint: Account, credit, insurance, pension and digital payment access.)
Show Suggested Answers
Multiple Choice
  1. Cash Reserve Ratio
    CRR is the portion of bank deposits kept as cash reserve with RBI.
  2. Securities market
    SEBI regulates the securities and capital markets.
  3. Bank account balance
    Debit card payments use money available in the customer’s bank account.
  4. Imports exceed exports
    Trade deficit occurs when the value of imports is greater than exports.
  5. Immovable property
    Mortgage is a security interest over immovable property such as house or land.
  6. Instant digital payments
    UPI is mainly used for instant digital bank-to-bank payments through mobile platforms.
Higher-Order Answers
  1. CRR and SLR:
    CRR is the cash reserve that banks maintain with RBI. SLR is the portion of deposits maintained in approved liquid assets such as government securities. CRR directly reduces cash available for lending, while SLR ensures liquidity and safety.
  2. Debit card and credit card:
    A debit card uses the customer’s own bank account balance. A credit card allows the customer to spend up to a sanctioned credit limit and repay later.
  3. Regulator mapping:
    RBI is linked with banking and monetary system. SEBI is linked with securities market. IRDAI is linked with insurance. PFRDA is linked with pension. NABARD is linked with agriculture and rural development finance. SIDBI is linked with MSME finance.
  4. Digital banking safety:
    Digital banking safety prevents unauthorized transactions, identity theft and financial fraud. Customers should never share OTP, PIN, CVV, passwords or UPI PIN and should avoid suspicious links.
  5. FDI and FPI:
    FDI is direct investment in a business or asset with a long-term interest. FPI is investment in financial securities such as shares and bonds and may be more market-oriented.
  6. Financial inclusion:
    Financial inclusion gives people access to savings, credit, insurance, pension, remittance and digital payment services. It supports formal financial participation, reduces dependency on informal credit and helps government benefits reach people directly.
Concept Matching
  1. RBI → Central bank and banking regulator
  2. SEBI → Securities market regulator
  3. IRDAI → Insurance regulator
  4. PFRDA → Pension regulator
  5. NPA → Problem loan / non-performing asset
  6. KYC → Customer identification
  7. UPI → Instant digital payment system
  8. FDI → Direct foreign business investment

This chapter should be revised as a practical financial-awareness checklist: regulator-function, product-purpose, payment-mode, banking-risk, customer-safety and external-sector vocabulary.