money supply, banking & financial institutions section 5 MCQ Questions & Answers Detailed Explanation

MOST IMPORTANT indian economy mcq - 12 EXERCISES

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The following question based on Money Supply, Banking and Financial Institutions topic of indian economy mcq

Questions : If the interest rate is decreased in an economy, it will

(a) Increase the tax collection of the Government

(b) Increase the investment expenditure in the economy

(c) Decrease the consumption expenditure in the economy

(d) Increase the total savings in the economy

The correct answers to the above question in:

Answer: (b)

When the cost of money (interest rate) is cheaper in the economy, it helps in investment.

For investment, the main cost is the cost of capital i.e. the rate at which capital/money is available.

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Read more money and supply banking financial institutions Based Indian Economy Questions and Answers

Question : 1

Which of the following statements are true regarding the “Bharat Bond ETF”:

  1. It will provide liquidity to investors
  2. It will deepen the corporate bond market
  3. Individuals will not be allowed to purchase these instruments
  4. It will be traded on the stock exchange
Select the correct answer using the code given below:

a) (ii) & (iv) only

b) (i) & (iii) only

c) (i) & (ii) only

d) (i), (ii) & (iv) only

Answer: (d)

Government companies can issue bonds directly also to the investors/public but in the case of "Bharat Bond ETF", various govt companies will issue bonds to "Bharat Bond ETF" and then "Bharat Bond ETF" will club these bonds and issue new bonds under the name "Bharat Bond ETF".

So now when a person is investing in "Bharat Bond ETF" means purchasing the bonds of "Bharat Bond ETF" then basically he is investing in various PSUs through "Bharat Bond ETF". The money which the "Bharat Bond ETF" will get, it will pass on to the various govt companies to purchase their bonds.

The minimum size of bond is Rs. 1000, so retail public/individual can purchase and hence the "corporate bond market" will deepen (reach to more and more people).

It will provide liquidity to investors as it will be traded on the stock exchange and it will be more accessible. The bonds will be issued either with 3-year maturity or 10-year maturity.

For the government companies, it is a new way of finance other than the bank financing and it will expand their investor base which will ultimately increase the demand for the bonds of govt. companies resulting in a lower cost of borrowing for government companies.

CPSU, CPSE, CPFI are just different categories of Public Sector companies, no need to go into it.

Question : 2

Which among the following is a correct definition of Fiduciary Issue of notes?

a) The issue of currency notes without metallic backing.

b) The issue of currency notes with partial metallic backing.

c) The issue of currency notes with metallic backing.

d) The issue of currency notes with proportional metallic backing.

Answer: (a)

Question : 3

The term "Bharat 22" recently seen in the news is related to which of the following:

a) It is an Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) launched by Government of India

b) A missile programme launched by ISRO

c) A programme launched by Government to give incentives to defence equipment manufacturing in India

d) A programme to make India "open defecation free" by 2022

Answer: (a)

Bharat 22 is an Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) comprising shares of 22 Companies, mostly public sector companies.

The ETF is well diversified with investments across six core sectors — basic materials, energy, finance, FMCG, industrial and utilities.

Question : 4

Which of the following functions are part of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) acting as Banker to Central Government?

  1. RBI maintains the account for the various central government funds like Consolidated Fund of India, Contingency Fund and Public Account of India
  2. RBI acts as an advisor to the government on monetary and banking related matters
  3. RBI provides Ways and Means Advances to the government
  4. RBI floats loans and manages them on behalf of the government
Select the correct answer using the code given below:

a) (ii) & (iii) only

b) (i), (ii) & (iii) only

c) (i) & (ii) only

d) All of the above

Answer: (b)

When RBI floats/raises loans on behalf of the government then it is acting as a "Debt Manager" of government and not as a Banker to the government.

So (iv) statement is not true.

Question : 5

Consider the following statements regarding ‘Circuit Breaker’:

  1. Circuit breaker applies when the stock or indices moves too much in either direction
  2. Circuit breakers when triggered may bring about a coordinated trading halt in all the equity markets nationwide
Select the correct answer using the code given below:

a) (ii) only

b) Both (i) & (ii)

c) (i) only

d) Neither (i) nor (ii)

Answer: (b)

Circuit breakers are pre-defined values in percentage terms, which trigger an automatic check/halt/stop when there is a runaway move in any security or index in either direction (either increase or decrease).

The values are calculated from the previous closing level of the security or the index. Usually, circuit breakers are employed for both stocks (share of a particular company) and indices (SENSEX/NIFTY). That means if one company's share fluctuates too much then also circuit breakers can apply OR if the overall market i.e. either SENSEX/NIFTY fluctuates then also circuit breakers come into play.

The index-based market-wide circuit breaker system applies at 3 stages of the index movement, either way viz. at 10%, 15% and 20%. These circuit breakers when triggered bring about a coordinated trading halt in all equity and equity derivative markets nationwide.

The market-wide circuit breakers are triggered by the movement of either the BSE Sensex 30 or the Nifty 50, whichever is breached earlier. This means that if either NIFTY or SENSEX moves beyond 10% then the nationwide markets regulated by SEBI will come to halt. (But in the case of a company, only the trading in that company is halted.)

Stock exchanges BSE and NSE on 23rd March 2020 halted trading for 45 minutes within less than an hour of market opening after benchmark index Sensex crashed 10% in early trade.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) is the regulatory body for dealing with all matters related to the development and regulation of the securities market in India. SEBI was established on the 12th of April in 1988.

SEBI was given statutory powers on 12 April 1992 through the SEBI Act, 1992.

Question : 6

The Current Account Deficit in Balance of Payment can be financed through:

  1. Net capital inflow
  2. Foreign exchange reserve transaction
Select the correct answer using the code given below:

a) (ii) only

b) Both (i) & (ii)

c) (i) only

d) None of the above

Answer: (b)

If the Current Account is negative that means we are spending more and earning less (imports are more than exports), then we require foreign exchange to fund the Current Account Deficit.

This foreign exchange can come if we are surplus in Capital Account i.e. there is a net inflow in Capital Account. Or we can also use the foreign exchange reserves of our country. So, both statements are true.

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