Friday, April 17, 2026

Money and Banking Notes for Competitive Exams – RBI, Monetary Policy, Banking System, Money Supply for UPSC, SSC, IBPS

Money and Banking 

Introduction

Money and banking is one of the most important and high-scoring topics in the Economy section of almost all competitive exams like UPSC, SSC, Railways, Banking (IBPS, SBI), State PCS and other government exams. It connects directly with real life – how money is created, how banks work, how RBI controls inflation, and how digital payments like UPI are changing India’s economy.

In simple words, money is anything that is generally accepted as a medium of exchange, and banking is the organised system of accepting deposits and giving loans through banks. By understanding concepts like functions of money, money supply (M1, M2, M3, M4), RBI’s role, CRR, SLR, Repo Rate, types of banks and digital payments, you can easily answer many theory as well as current affairs based questions in your exam. This blog will explain all these topics in very simple English with tables, examples and exam-focused keywords so that you can revise quickly and remember for a long time.

 



Table of Contents

Introduction to Money and Banking

Money is anything widely accepted as a medium of exchange for goods and services. Banking refers to the system where banks accept deposits, provide loans and facilitate payments.

Why Money & Banking is important for exams:

·       High weightage in UPSC (Economy), SSC CGL, Banking exams (IBPS PO/Clerk)

·       Current affairs heavy – RBI policies, repo rate changes, digital payments

·       Direct questions on money supply (M1, M2, M3, M4), CRR, SLR, Repo Rate


Evolution of Money (Barter to Digital)

Stage

Description

Problems

Barter System

Direct exchange of goods

Double coincidence of wants

Commodity Money

Gold, silver, grains

Difficult to carry, store

Metallic Money

Coins (gold, silver, copper)

Expensive to mint

Paper Money

Notes issued by central bank

None (fiat money)

Digital Money

UPI, mobile wallets, CBDC

Cyber security risks

 

Modern Money: Today we use fiat money (currency notes with no intrinsic value, backed by government trust).



Do you know India has faced Emergency 3 times in history?



Functions and Types of Money

Primary Functions (4 main):

1.   Medium of Exchange – Buy goods without barter

2.   Measure of Value – Price everything in rupees

3.   Store of Value – Save for future use

4.   Transfer of Value – Send money easily

Secondary Functions:

·       Standard of deferred payment

·       Basis of credit system

·       Liquidity provider

Types of Money:

Type

Examples

Full Bodied Money

Gold coins

Representative Money

Gold certificates

Fiat Money

10, 100 notes

Credit Money

Cheques, drafts

Digital Money

UPI, Paytm wallet

Learn national Income and it's measurement, concepts, methods, sectors and importance with detailed explanation and examples.


Money Supply Measures (M1, M2, M3, M4) 

RBI defines 4 measures of money supply:

Measure

Components

Formula

M1 (Narrow Money)

Currency + Demand deposits

C + DD

M2

M1 + Post office savings

M1 + POS

M3 (Broad Money)

M2 + Time deposits of banks

M2 + TD

M4

M3 + Post office time deposits

M3 + POTD

 

Where:

·       C = Currency with public

·       DD = Demand deposits with banks

·       TD = Time deposits with banks

·       POS = Post office savings deposits

·       POTD = Post office time deposits

Exam Shortcut: M1 < M2 < M3 < M4 (narrowest to broadest)

Sample Question: Which is the narrowest measure of money supply?
Ans: M1



Role of Reserve Bank of India (RBI)

RBI established: 1 April 1935 (nationalised 1949)
Headquarters: Mumbai
Governor: (Current governor name – update before publishing)

Main Functions (6 key areas):

1.   Issuer of Currency – Prints notes

2.   Banker to Government – Manages government accounts

3.   Banker to Banks – Lender of last resort

4.   Controller of Credit – Regulates money supply

5.   Custodian of Forex Reserves – Manages $ reserves

6.   Regulator – Licenses banks, sets rules

RBI Tools: CRR, SLR, Repo Rate, Reverse Repo, Bank Rate, Open Market Operations



MARATHAS – Complete Notes for Competitive Exams!



Monetary Policy Tools (CRR, SLR, Repo, Reverse Repo)

Quantitative Tools (control money supply): 

Tool

Full Form

Purpose

RBI Action

CRR

Cash Reserve Ratio

Control liquidity

Increase CRR Less money Controls inflation

SLR

Statutory Liquidity Ratio

Govt security investment

Increase SLR Less lending capacity

Repo Rate

Repurchase Agreement Rate

Short-term loans to banks

Increase Repo Borrowing cost Inflation

Reverse Repo

Reverse Repurchase Rate

RBI borrows from banks

Increase Reverse Repo Takes money out

Bank Rate

Long-term lending rate

Penal rate

Rarely changed

OMO

Open Market Operations

Buy/sell govt securities

Buy bonds Money supply

 
Learn about Rocks, types and Earthquakes with examples.Perfect for UPSC, SSC, RRB Exams.


Commercial Banks vs Cooperative Banks vs RRBs

 

Feature

Commercial Banks

Cooperative Banks

Regional Rural Banks

Ownership

Private/Public

Cooperative societies

Govt + Sponsor bank

Area

National

Local/Regional

Specific district

Products

Full range

Limited

Rural focus

Regulation

RBI

RBI + Registrar

RBI + NABARD

Examples

SBI, HDFC, ICICI

Saraswat, Cosmos

Gramin Banks

 

14 Public Sector Banks (after mergers):

1.   SBI, PNB, BoB, BoI, Canara Bank, UCO, Union Bank, Indian Bank, etc.


Payment and Settlement Systems

 

System

Full Form

Purpose

RTGS

Real Time Gross Settlement

High-value transactions (>2 lakh)

NEFT

National Electronic Funds Transfer

Low-medium value (batches)

IMPS

Immediate Payment Service

24x7 instant mobile payments

UPI

Unified Payments Interface

Phone-based instant payments

Cheque Truncation

Digital cheque clearing

No physical cheques

 

UPI Success: India leads world with 14+ billion monthly transactions (2025 data).



Complete guide on Volcanoes, humidity, rainfall and cyclones.Simple explanation with examples.


Digital Banking and UPI Revolution

Key Digital Initiatives:

·       Jan Dhan Yojana – Zero balance accounts

·       BHIM UPI – Govt UPI app

·       Aadhaar Enabled Payment System (AEPS)

·       e-KYC – Paperless verification

·       CBDC – Digital Rupee (pilot launched)

UPI Features:

·       PhonePe, Google Pay, Paytm dominance

·       QR code payments

·       Merchant payments, P2P transfers

·       Cross-border UPI (international expansion)


Banking Reforms and Nationalisation

Nationalisation Rounds:

Year

Banks Nationalised

Total PSBs

1969

14 major banks

14

1980

6 more banks

20

1991+

Narasimham Committee reforms

Liberalisation

2019-20

10 PSB mergers

12 PSBs


Important Exam Tables and Facts

Fact

Value

RBI established

1 April 1935

First RBI Governor

Sir Osborne Smith

Currency notes issued

2, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 500, 2000

1 note issued by

Ministry of Finance

Coins issued by

RBI

Smallest denomination

50 paise (discontinued)


MCQs

Q1. What is the main defect of the Barter System?

(A) No standard of value
(B) Double coincidence of wants
(C) Cannot store value
(D) All of the above

Answer: B
Explanation: The biggest problem of barter system was double coincidence of wants — both parties had to need exactly what the other offered at the same time.

Q2. Currency notes (paper money) are an example of which type of money?

(A) Commodity money
(B) Metallic money
(C) Representative money
(D) Fiat money

Answer: D
Explanation: Paper notes have no intrinsic value — they are accepted by government order (fiat). Hence they are called fiat money.

Q3. Which of the following is NOT a primary function of money?

(A) Medium of exchange
(B) Measure of value
(C) Standard of deferred payment
(D) Store of value

Answer: C
Explanation: Standard of deferred payment is a secondary function of money. The four primary functions are: medium of exchange, measure of value, store of value, transfer of value.

Q4. Which of the following is the narrowest measure of money supply in India?

(A) M2
(B) M3
(C) M1
(D) M4

Answer: C
Explanation: M1 (Currency with public + Demand deposits) is the narrowest measure. Order: M1 < M2 < M3 < M4.

Q5. M3 money supply is also known as:

(A) Narrow Money
(B) Broad Money
(C) Reserve Money
(D) High Powered Money

Answer: B
Explanation: M3 = M1 + Time deposits of commercial banks. It is the most commonly used broad money measure by RBI for policy purposes.

Q6. Which of the following is included in M2 but NOT in M1?

(A) Demand deposits
(B) Time deposits
(C) Post office savings deposits
(D) Currency with public

Answer: C
Explanation: M2 = M1 + Post office savings deposits. Post office savings are added over M1 to get M2.

Q7. When was the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) established?

(A) 1 April 1947
(B) 1 April 1935
(C) 26 January 1950
(D) 15 August 1949

Answer: B
Explanation: RBI was established on 1 April 1935 under the RBI Act 1934. It was nationalised in 1949.

Q8. Who was the first Governor of the Reserve Bank of India?

(A) C.D. Deshmukh
(B) James Braid Taylor
(C) Sir Osborne Smith
(D) Benegal Rama Rau

Answer: C
Explanation: Sir Osborne Smith was the first Governor of RBI (1935–1937). C.D. Deshmukh was the first Indian Governor.

Q9. The RBI acts as "Lender of Last Resort." This means:

(A) RBI gives loans to public
(B) RBI provides emergency funds to commercial banks
(C) RBI lends money to foreign governments
(D) RBI gives loans to state governments

Answer: B
Explanation: As lender of last resort, RBI provides emergency liquidity to commercial banks when they cannot raise funds from any other source.

Q10. Which of the following is NOT a function of RBI?

(A) Issue of currency notes
(B) Banker to the government
(C) Accepting deposits from public
(D) Custodian of foreign exchange reserves

Answer: C
Explanation: RBI does not accept deposits from the general public — that is the function of commercial banks. RBI deals only with banks and the government.

Q11. The 1 note in India is issued by:

(A) Reserve Bank of India
(B) State Bank of India
(C) Ministry of Finance
(D) NABARD

Answer: C
Explanation: All currency notes except
1 are issued by RBI. The 1 note is issued by the Ministry of Finance, Government of India.

Q12. The headquarters of the Reserve Bank of India is located in:

(A) New Delhi
(B) Kolkata
(C) Chennai
(D) Mumbai


Answer: D

Explanation: RBI's headquarters is in Mumbai (shifted from Kolkata in 1937).

Q13. Who is the Chairperson of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of India?

(A) Finance Minister
(B) Prime Minister
(C) RBI Governor
(D) Chief Economic Advisor

Answer: C
Explanation: The RBI Governor chairs the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), which decides Repo Rate and other policy rates every 2 months.

Q14. What is the full form of CRR?

(A) Central Reserve Rate
(B) Credit Regulation Ratio
(C) Cash Reserve Ratio
(D) Currency Reserve Ratio

Answer: C
Explanation: CRR (Cash Reserve Ratio) is the percentage of deposits that commercial banks must keep as cash with RBI.

Q15. When RBI increases the CRR, what happens to money supply?

(A) Money supply increases
(B) Money supply decreases
(C) No change in money supply
(D) Inflation increases

Answer: B
Explanation: Higher CRR
Banks keep more cash with RBI Less money available for lending Money supply decreases Inflation is controlled.

Q16. What is the full form of SLR?

(A) Standard Lending Ratio
(B) Statutory Liquidity Ratio
(C) Standard Liquidity Reserve
(D) Scheduled Lending Rate

Answer: B
Explanation: SLR (Statutory Liquidity Ratio) is the percentage of deposits that banks must maintain in the form of gold, cash or approved government securities.

Q17. Which of the following counts under SLR?

(A) Cash in hand
(B) Gold owned by the bank
(C) Balance with RBI
(D) All of the above

Answer: D
Explanation: SLR can be maintained in cash in hand + gold + approved government securities + net balance with RBI.

Q18. Repo Rate is the rate at which:

(A) Banks lend to RBI
(B) RBI lends to commercial banks
(C) RBI lends to foreign banks
(D) Banks lend to public

Answer: B
Explanation: Repo Rate = Rate at which RBI lends short-term money to commercial banks (against government securities as collateral).

Q19. Reverse Repo Rate is the rate at which:

(A) RBI lends to banks
(B) Banks lend to public
(C) Banks lend (deposit) money with RBI
(D) RBI lends to government

Answer: C
Explanation: Reverse Repo Rate = Rate at which commercial banks park their excess money with RBI. It is always lower than Repo Rate.

Q20. An increase in Bank Rate generally indicates that:

(A) Money supply will increase
(B) Credit will become cheaper
(C) Borrowing will become costlier
(D) Inflation will increase

Answer: C
Explanation: Higher Bank Rate
Loans from RBI become expensive Commercial banks raise their interest rates Borrowing becomes costlier Money supply contracts.

Q21. Open Market Operations (OMO) means:

(A) Opening new bank branches
(B) RBI buying/selling government securities in open market
(C) Banks lending to public in open market
(D) Government selling shares in market

Answer: B
Explanation: In OMO, RBI buys or sells government securities in the open market to inject or absorb liquidity from the banking system.

Q22. In which year were 14 major commercial banks nationalised in India?

(A) 1947
(B) 1955
(C) 1969
(D) 1980

Answer: C
Explanation: 14 major commercial banks were nationalised on 19 July 1969 by the Indira Gandhi government to bring banking to the masses.

Q23. How many banks were nationalised in the second round of nationalisation in 1980?

(A) 4
(B) 5
(C) 6
(D) 8

Answer: C
Explanation: 6 more banks were nationalised in 1980, taking the total number of public sector banks to 20.

Q24. What percentage of loans must be given to Priority Sector by commercial banks?

(A) 20%
(B) 30%
(C) 40%
(D) 50%

Answer: C
Explanation: RBI mandates that all scheduled commercial banks must lend at least 40% of their Adjusted Net Bank Credit (ANBC) to priority sectors like agriculture, MSMEs and weaker sections.

Q25. Which committee recommended major banking sector reforms in 1991?

(A) Kelkar Committee
(B) Narasimham Committee
(C) Rangarajan Committee
(D) Chakravarty Committee

Answer: B
Explanation: The Narasimham Committee (1991) recommended liberalisation, entry of private banks, reduction of CRR/SLR and strengthening of banking regulation.

Q26. Regional Rural Banks (RRBs) in India are regulated by:

(A) RBI only
(B) NABARD only
(C) RBI and NABARD
(D) Finance Ministry

Answer: C
Explanation: RRBs are jointly regulated by RBI (for banking operations) and NABARD (for development and refinancing). They were established in 1975.

Q27. Which of the following is NOT a payment bank in India?

(A) Airtel Payments Bank
(B) India Post Payments Bank
(C) HDFC Bank
(D) Fino Payments Bank

Answer: C
Explanation: HDFC Bank is a full-service commercial bank, not a payment bank. Payment banks can accept deposits up to
2 lakh but cannot issue loans.

Q28. RTGS is used for which type of transactions?

(A) Small value retail transactions
(B) Post office savings
(C) High-value transactions above
2 lakh
(D) International wire transfers only

Answer: C
Explanation: RTGS (Real Time Gross Settlement) is used for high-value transactions (minimum
2 lakh) and settles them in real time on a gross basis.

Q29. UPI (Unified Payments Interface) was developed by which organisation?

(A) RBI
(B) SBI
(C) NPCI
(D) Ministry of Finance

Answer: C
Explanation: UPI was developed and launched by NPCI (National Payments Corporation of India) in 2016. It enables instant bank-to-bank transfers using mobile phones.

Q30. Digital Rupee (CBDC) was piloted by which organisation in India?

(A) SBI
(B) SEBI
(C) Ministry of Finance
(D) RBI

Answer: D
Explanation: RBI launched the pilot of India's Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) — the Digital Rupee (e
) — in 2022–23 for wholesale and retail segments.



Read our full Genetics notes blog NOW.


FAQs-

Q1. What are the 4 measures of money supply?
M1, M2, M3, M4 where M1 is narrowest (currency + demand deposits) and M4 is broadest.

 

Q2. What is the difference between Repo Rate and Reverse Repo Rate?
Repo Rate: RBI lends to banks (higher rate). Reverse Repo: Banks lend to RBI (lower rate).

 

Q3. What is CRR and how does it control inflation?
CRR (Cash Reserve Ratio) is % of deposits banks must keep with RBI. Higher CRR = less lending = controls inflation.

 

Q4. Which is the banker to banks in India?
Reserve Bank of India (RBI) acts as banker to banks and lender of last resort.

 

Q5. What is M3 money supply?
M3 = M1 + Time deposits with banks (broad money).

 

Q6. Name any 3 digital payment systems in India.
RTGS, NEFT, UPI are major digital payment systems.

 

Q7. When was RBI nationalised?
RBI was established in 1935 and nationalised in 1949.

 

Q8. What is Priority Sector Lending?
40% of total loans must go to agriculture, MSMEs, weaker sections (PSB target).


Conclusion

Money and banking is not just a theory chapter – it is the backbone of the modern economy and a permanent favourite of paper setters in UPSC, SSC, Railways and Banking exams. Once you clearly understand the basic ideas of money, different measures of money supply, the role of RBI, monetary policy tools (CRR, SLR, Repo, Reverse Repo), types of banks and digital payment systems like UPI, you can handle both static and current affairs questions with confidence.

You do not need advanced economics to score well here. What you really need is: clear definitions, key formulas (like money supply measures), current RBI rates, important years (1935, 1949, 1969, 1980), and 2–3 rounds of MCQ practice. Revise the tables from this blog, relate them with news (like changes in repo rate or new RBI guidelines), and solve previous year questions. If you do this sincerely, Money and Banking will become a sure-shot scoring chapter in your exam and help you boost your overall marks in the Economy / General Awareness section.

 

 

F