Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgment
- 1 An Overview on Development
- 2 Financial Inclusion: The Nature and Extent of the Challenge
- 3 Financial Inclusion: The Indian Perspective
- 4 Tackling Financial Inclusion and RBI Policy: Responses and Voluntary Initiatives of Banks
- 5 Microfinance Experience and Other Institutional Approaches
- 6 Policy Response Committee on Financial Inclusion
- 7 International Experience in Promoting Financial Inclusion and Policy Responses
- 8 The Way Forward – Determinants and Macro Policies
- Appendix
- Bibliography
- Index
6 - Policy Response Committee on Financial Inclusion
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgment
- 1 An Overview on Development
- 2 Financial Inclusion: The Nature and Extent of the Challenge
- 3 Financial Inclusion: The Indian Perspective
- 4 Tackling Financial Inclusion and RBI Policy: Responses and Voluntary Initiatives of Banks
- 5 Microfinance Experience and Other Institutional Approaches
- 6 Policy Response Committee on Financial Inclusion
- 7 International Experience in Promoting Financial Inclusion and Policy Responses
- 8 The Way Forward – Determinants and Macro Policies
- Appendix
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In order to address the issues of financial inclusion, the Government of India constituted a ‘Committee on Financial Inclusion’ under the Chairmanship of Dr C. Rangarajan. The Committee submitted its final report to Union Finance Minister on 4 January 2008.
The terms of reference of the committee included:
(i) studying the pattern of exclusion from access to financial services disaggregated by region, gender and occupational structure
(ii) identifying the barriers confronted by vulnerable groups in accessing credit and financial services including supply, demand and institutional constraints
(iii) reviewing the international experience in implementing policies for financial inclusion and to examine their relevance applicability to India.
The committee further suggested:
(i) a strategy to extend financial services to small and marginal farmers and other vulnerable groups, including measures to streamline and simplify procedures, reduce transaction costs and make the operations transparent for growth
(ii) measures including institutional changes to be undertaken by the financial sector to implement the proposed strategy of financial inclusion
(iii) a monitoring mechanism to assess the quality and quantum of financial inclusion including indicators for assessing progress.
To suggest measures to extend the reach of the financial sector to such vulnerable groups by minimizing, if not eliminating the formal and informal barriers to access encountered by such groups.
In the report that Dr Rangarajan submitted, it was maintained that access to finance by the poor and vulnerable groups is a prerequisite for poverty reduction and social cohesion.
- Type
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- Information
- The Financial Inclusion Imperative and Sustainable Approaches , pp. 188 - 203Publisher: Foundation BooksPrint publication year: 2011
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