Contents
- 1 Introduction
- 2 From Quantity to Quality: Reimagining India’s Financial Architecture
- 3 Rebuilding Domestic Savings: The Bedrock of Sustainable Growth
- 4 Reform Pathways
- 5 Market-Based Long-Term Financing: Correcting the ALM Mismatch
- 6 Improving Capital Efficiency: Doing More with Less
- 7 Leveraging Startups: Bending the Capital–Output Curve
- 8 A Virtuous Cycle of Reform
- 9 Conclusion
Introduction
India’s aspiration of becoming a developed economy by 2047, envisaged in Viksit Bharat @ 2047, demands not merely higher investment but a qualitative transformation of its financial ecosystem, as highlighted by the World Bank and RBI.
From Quantity to Quality: Reimagining India’s Financial Architecture
- India’s growth strategy has historically emphasised capital accumulation, reflected in high investment-to-GDP ratios.
- However, international experience (East Asia, OECD economies) shows that long-term growth hinges on capital productivity, stability of financing, and institutional depth.
- With an Incremental Capital Output Ratio (ICOR) of around 4–5.5, India risks diminishing returns unless financial reforms focus on quality rather than volume.
Rebuilding Domestic Savings: The Bedrock of Sustainable Growth
- Domestic savings are the least volatile and most sovereign source of capital, insulating India from global financial shocks, as seen during the 2008 crisis and the 2013 taper tantrum.
- Yet, RBI data shows net household financial savings fell to nearly 5.3% of GDP in FY23, while household debt crossed 40% of GDP, signalling consumption-led leverage rather than asset creation.
Reform Pathways
- Financialisation of savings: Shifting household wealth from gold and real estate to financial assets through pensions, insurance, and capital markets.
- Strengthening long-term vehicles: Expanding the National Pension System (NPS) and deepening insurance penetration, aligned with OECD pension best practices.
- Digital enablers: Platforms like Unified Lending Interface (ULI) and JAM trinity can channel small savings into productive investments. Domestic savings thus form the first pillar, creating a stable pool for long-term capital formation.
Market-Based Long-Term Financing: Correcting the ALM Mismatch
- Limits of Bank-Centric Growth: Indian banks, despite improved balance sheets, face structural Asset-Liability Mismatch (ALM) due to short-term deposits funding long-gestation projects. Global evidence shows infrastructure and manufacturing are better financed through bond markets and institutional investors.
- Deepening Capital Markets and Corporate bond market expansion: Currently shallow and skewed toward AAA issuers, unlike the US or South Korea.
- Institutional participation: Pension and insurance funds need credit enhancement mechanisms, such as those provided by NaBFID, to enter riskier construction phases.
- Regulatory predictability: Stable taxation and contract enforcement reduce risk premiums, improving capital allocation. This shift reduces systemic risk and complements domestic savings mobilisation.
Improving Capital Efficiency: Doing More with Less
ICOR as a Policy Lens: Lowering ICOR from ~4.5 to ~4 could significantly ease financing pressure. This requires:
- Execution reforms: Faster approvals, dispute resolution (as stressed by Justice D.Y. Chandrachud in infrastructure arbitration cases).
- Logistics and DPI: PM Gati Shakti and Digital Public Infrastructure reduce transaction costs, raising returns on investment.
- Green efficiency: Integrating sustainability through initiatives like the Green Credit Programme, aligning growth with climate commitments. Capital efficiency ensures growth is non-inflationary and fiscally prudent.
Leveraging Startups: Bending the Capital–Output Curve
- Startups as Quality Multipliers: Startups, particularly in deep tech (semiconductors, space, AI, clean energy), generate high value-added output with lower capital intensity. India’s position as the world’s third-largest startup ecosystem illustrates this potential.
- Macro-Economic Payoffs
- Productivity spillovers across logistics, healthcare, and manufacturing.
- Wealth democratisation, expanding the savings base beyond traditional industrial elites.
- Innovation-led growth, consistent with endogenous growth theory (Romer).
A Virtuous Cycle of Reform
Mutually Reinforcing Pillars
- Higher domestic savings feed market-based financing.
- Efficient capital markets channel funds to startups and infrastructure.
- Startups and DPI enhance capital efficiency economy-wide.
- Together, they create a self-reinforcing growth ecosystem.
Conclusion
Echoing Justice Radhakrishnan’s vision of economic democracy and President Droupadi Murmu’s call for inclusive growth, India’s shift to quality finance is essential for a resilient, innovative Viksit Bharat by 2047.


