Financial Inclusion in India and Its Challenges

Concern over falling household savings in India – what can be done

Why in the News?

India’s household savings rate fell to 29.7% of GDP in 2022–23, the lowest level in 40 years, down from 34.6% in 2011–12.

What led to the decline in household financial savings in India?

  • Rise in Consumption Expenditure: After the COVID-19 pandemic, households increased spending on consumer durables, travel, and lifestyle, reducing the capacity to save.
  • High Inflation: Persistent rise in prices of essentials like food, fuel, and healthcare eroded disposable income and limited savings.
  • Shift Towards Riskier Financial Assets: Investments in mutual funds and equities increased, with SIP contributions rising significantly, while traditional savings like fixed deposits declined.
  • Slow Income Growth and High Interest Rates (Fisher Effect): Stagnant wages and low nominal income growth, coupled with high interest rates and loan EMIs, reduced household savings potential.
  • Rising Household Debt: Household liabilities reached 6.4% of GDP in FY24, due to more borrowing for housing, education, and personal loans.
  • Reversal of COVID-Era Forced Savings: Savings spiked during lockdowns but dropped sharply as economic activity resumed and pent-up demand surged.

Why is the shift to financial assets important for capital formation?

  • Improves Resource Mobilisation: Financial assets like deposits, mutual funds, and pension funds channel household savings into productive sectors, supporting investment and infrastructure growth.
  • Enhances Financial Intermediation and Efficiency: Financial institutions act as intermediaries, allocating savings to sectors with higher returns and productivity, ensuring efficient capital use. Eg: Banks mobilise savings into loans for MSMEs, which contribute significantly to employment and GDP.
  • Reduces Idle Capital and Boosts Formal Economy: Unlike physical assets (like gold and real estate), financial assets contribute to the formal economy, increasing credit availability and financial inclusion. Eg: Shift from gold to digital savings accounts increases liquidity and boosts credit growth in the economy.

How has rising household debt impacted financial stability?

  • Increased Vulnerability to Economic Shocks: High debt levels reduce households’ ability to absorb income shocks (like job loss or medical emergencies), leading to loan defaults and stress on financial institutions. Eg: During the COVID-19 pandemic, many households defaulted on EMIs due to income loss, affecting NBFCs and banks.
  • Reduced Net Financial Savings: Growing liabilities shrink the net financial savings rate, limiting the funds available for productive investments and weakening domestic capital formation. Eg: In FY24, household liabilities rose to 6.4% of GDP while financial savings fell to 5.1%, a four-decade low.
  • Pressure on Banking and Credit Systems: High levels of unsecured loans (like personal and gold loans) increase credit risk, prompting regulatory tightening and affecting credit flow to the economy. Eg: RBI imposed stricter norms on personal loans in FY25 to prevent systemic risk from unsecured lending growth.

What steps can improve savings among rural and low-income groups?

  • Promote Micro-Savings Products: Introduce low-ticket savings schemes tailored for daily or weekly contributions. Eg: The PM Jan Dhan Yojana encourages basic savings with zero-balance accounts.
  • Provide Government-Backed Guarantees and Incentives: Offer interest subsidies, insurance cover, or guaranteed returns to build trust among low-income savers. Eg: The Kisan Vikas Patra and Public Provident Fund (PPF) offer guaranteed returns with sovereign backing.
  • Expand Financial Literacy Campaigns: Run focused awareness drives on budgeting, saving, and investment options in local languages. Eg: RBI’s Financial Literacy Week and SEBI’s village workshops educate people on safe saving practices.
  • Leverage Digital and Fintech Solutions: Use mobile wallets, micro-investing apps, and digital payment systems to make saving more accessible. Eg: Platforms like Paytm Payments Bank and Airtel Payments Bank offer micro-savings and insurance.
  • Revamp and Strengthen Post Office Schemes: Modernise postal savings with better accessibility, digital interface, and doorstep banking. Eg: Rural Post Offices now offer core banking services, enabling safer and formal saving options.
  • Introduce Default Saving Options (Behavioral Nudges): Implement opt-out pension schemes or auto-enrollment in saving plans for informal workers. Eg: The Atal Pension Yojana encourages informal sector workers to save for retirement through auto-debits.

Way forward: 

  • Develop a National Household Savings Strategy: Create a coordinated policy framework across ministries with clear targets, integrating financial literacy, product innovation, and social security measures for underserved populations.
  • Encourage Inclusive Fintech Innovations: Promote user-friendly micro-investing platforms, AI-driven financial guidance, and blockchain-based savings tools to enable secure, transparent, and accessible savings for rural and low-income households.

Mains PYQ:

[UPSC 2017] Among several factors for India’s potential growth, savings rate is the most effective one. Do you agree? What are the other factors available for growth potential?

Linkage: The artilce explicitly state that India’s gross domestic savings rate fell to its lowest in four decades (29.7% of GDP in 2022-23). This question directly related to the importance of the savings rate for India’s growth, which aligns with the concern over falling household savings. 

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