A budgetary signal as banks cannot bear it all


A Budgetary Signal as Banks Cannot Bear It All

UPSC Study Note | GS-III: Indian Economy | Financial Sector Reforms


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
India's Govt. Securities (G-Secs) outstanding ~90% of GDP [S5]
India's Corporate Bond Market size ~15-16% of GDP [S5]
Comparison Corporate bonds < half the size of G-Sec market; well below peers
Budget 2026-27 announcements Market-making framework for corporate bonds; Total Return Swaps (TRS) on corporate bonds; Bond-index derivatives; Infrastructure Risk Guarantee Fund; CPSE REIT asset recycling [S2][S3]
Infrastructure Risk Guarantee Fund Provides partial credit guarantees to lenders during project development & construction phase [S3]
CPSE REIT Dedicated REITs to recycle real estate assets of Central Public Sector Enterprises [S3]
Total Return Swap (TRS) Derivative instrument enabling transfer of bond's total economic return (interest + capital gain/loss) from one party to another; improves liquidity & risk distribution
Implementing ministry Ministry of Finance (Dept. of Economic Affairs) in coordination with SEBI and RBI
High-Level Committee on Banking Set up for Viksit Bharat alignment of banking sector [S1]
GDP Growth FY2025-26 (official estimate) Real GDP 7.4%; Nominal GDP 8% [S1]
PFC & REC restructuring Government restructuring Power Finance Corporation and Rural Electrification Corporation for scale and efficiency [S1]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Administrative / Institutional

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12-18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. India's government securities outstanding are close to 90% of GDP — comparable to many large economies. [S5]
  2. India's corporate bond market is approximately 15-16% of GDP — less than half the size of the G-Sec market. [S5]
  3. Budget 2026-27 proposed introduction of Total Return Swaps (TRS) on corporate bonds — a first-time derivative instrument for this asset class in India. [S2]
  4. Infrastructure Risk Guarantee Fund announced in Budget 2026-27 provides partial credit guarantees to lenders during the development and construction phase of infrastructure projects. [S3]
  5. Budget 2026-27 proposed recycling CPSE real estate assets through dedicated REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts). [S3]
  6. A Market-Making Framework for corporate bonds was proposed in Budget 2026-27, including access to funds and derivatives on corporate bond indices. [S2]
  7. NITI Aayog released the report "Deepening the Corporate Bond Market in India" ahead of Budget 2026. [S1]
  8. A High-Level Committee on Banking for Viksit Bharat was set up to align the banking sector with India's long-term growth ambitions. [S1]
  9. Corporate bonds in India are regulated by SEBI under the SEBI (Issue and Listing of Non-Convertible Securities) Regulations, 2021.
  10. REITs in India are governed under SEBI (Real Estate Investment Trusts) Regulations, 2014.
  11. India's Real GDP growth for FY2025-26 is officially estimated at 7.4% with Nominal GDP growth at 8%. [S1]
  12. PFC (Power Finance Corporation) and REC (Rural Electrification Corporation) are being restructured to achieve greater scale in public-sector NBFC operations. [S1]
  13. The NPA crisis peak in India was approximately 11.6% gross NPA ratio for scheduled commercial banks, reached around 2018. [S4]
  14. The author of the article analysing Budget 2026 financial sector reforms is Prof. Saumitra Bhaduri, Madras School of Economics. [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-III — Indian Economy and Issues Relating to Planning, Mobilization of Resources, Growth, Development and Employment

Specific Syllabus Headings: - Indian Economy: Mobilization of resources, growth, development - Banking sector reforms; Non-Performing Assets - Infrastructure: Investment models, PPP, financing - Capital markets; Securities markets

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "India's banks are overburdened by risks that functioning capital markets elsewhere absorb." In light of Union Budget 2026-27 proposals, critically examine the structural constraints on India's corporate bond market and suggest a reform roadmap. (GS-III) 2. "The introduction of Total Return Swaps and bond-index derivatives in India's capital market represents a qualitative shift in financial sector architecture." Analyse the significance of these instruments and their potential to reduce systemic risks concentrated in the banking sector. (GS-III) 3. "Infrastructure financing in India has chronically relied on bank loans, generating asset-liability mismatches and sectoral NPAs. Evaluate how instruments like Infrastructure Risk Guarantee Funds and REITs can structurally correct this imbalance." (GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) in Indian Banking Root cause of why bank balance sheets are overburdened; historical arc from 2012-2020
Corporate Bond Market in India The central reform target; structure, regulatory framework, comparison with peers
SEBI Regulations (NCS, REIT, InvIT) Statutory backbone of the reform instruments proposed in Budget 2026-27
Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) & Infrastructure Investment Trusts (InvITs) Key vehicles for asset recycling and off-balance-sheet financing
Priority Sector Lending & Directed Credit Structural reason banks bear non-commercial risks; policy context
IL&FS Crisis and NBFC Regulation Domestic precedent for risk concentration outside regulated banking
Narasimham Committee Recommendations (I & II) Historical origin of India's partial financial reforms; gap between recommendation and implementation
Viksit Bharat 2047 — Financial Sector Goals Overarching policy framework within which Budget 2026-27 proposals are embedded

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing REIT with InvIT: REITs hold real estate assets; InvITs hold infrastructure (roads, power, pipelines). Budget 2026-27 specifically proposes CPSE REIT for real estate recycling — not InvIT.
  2. Attributing market-making to RBI alone: The corporate bond market-making framework is a SEBI-led measure; RBI governs G-Sec market-making. The two regulators have distinct but overlapping jurisdiction — confusing them is a common mistake.
  3. Treating Total Return Swaps as a banking instrument: TRS are capital market derivatives — they transfer bond risk to non-bank entities (funds, insurers), not within the banking system.
  4. Misquoting the corporate bond market size: India's corporate bonds are ~15-16% of GDP (not 15-16% of total bond market). The G-Sec market is ~90% of GDP — these are both GDP-denominated figures.
  5. Assuming the Infrastructure Risk Guarantee Fund is a lending window: It provides partial credit guarantees (not direct loans) to lenders — a contingent liability of the government, not a disbursement fund.

11. Sources