Chapter 8 : Banks and the Magic of Finance

Banks and the Magic of Finance | Chapter 8 | Legacy IAS
Legacy IAS · Chapter 8 · NCERT Grade 7 Part 2

Banks and the Magic of Finance

Exploring Society: India and Beyond | Economic Life Around Us
“The banker is not only a middleman; he is the producer of a vital service, enabling entrepreneurs to transform ideas into reality through credit.” — Joseph Schumpeter, Economist
Content sourced and adapted from NCERT Textbook: Exploring Society – India and Beyond, Grade 7 Part 2 | Chapter 8. All rights reserved with NCERT. Prepared for UPSC/State PCS aspirants by Legacy IAS, Bangalore.

The Big Questions

  1. What is financial infrastructure, and what does it comprise?
  2. What are the main functions performed by banks and how do they impact people’s lives?
  3. How does financial infrastructure contribute to a nation’s progress?
01

Introduction — What is Financial Infrastructure?

In the previous chapter, we learned about India’s physical infrastructure — roads, railways, and telecommunication — which support economic activities. But how do the monetary transactions underpinning all economic activity actually take place? How is the development and maintenance of vast physical infrastructure funded?

The answer lies in financial infrastructure — a network of banks, payment systems, stock markets, and other financial institutions that help people, businesses, and the government facilitate financial transactions and manage money.

Financial Infrastructure — Key Components

  • Banks (commercial banks, cooperative banks, small finance banks)
  • Payment systems (UPI, NEFT, RTGS, IMPS, cheques, debit cards)
  • Stock markets (BSE, NSE)
  • Other financial institutions (Post Offices, NABARD, IFCI, RBI)
02

What Are Banks and What Do They Do?

Bank: A financial institution that collects money from people in the form of deposits and lends money to people or borrowers as loans.

Banks help make monetary transactions easy by offering services such as saving, withdrawing, and borrowing money. These services are used by a wide range of people — farmers, shopkeepers, nurses, businesses, and institutions.

To use the services of a bank, one first needs to open a bank account. The person or business is then called a bank account holder.

🔍 Think About It
  • Why is saving at the bank better than keeping cash at home? (Safety, interest, record, insurance)
  • Can two individuals lend to each other directly without a bank? What risks does that pose? (Trust issues, no guarantee, no record)
03

Hold Deposits — Types of Bank Accounts

Deposits: Money placed in a bank account that can be withdrawn as per the terms of the bank and often earns interest.
Fig 8.4 Types of bank accounts — Savings, Current, Fixed Deposit
Fig. 8.4. Types of Bank Accounts (Source: NCERT)
Account TypeWho Is It For?InterestWithdrawal Limits
Savings AccountIndividuals who save regularlyYes (moderate)Limited withdrawals per month; opens with minimum deposit
Current AccountBusinesses and traders making frequent paymentsNo interestUnlimited deposits and withdrawals
Fixed Deposit AccountAnyone seeking higher returns on a lump sumYes (higher than savings)One-time deposit for a fixed period (e.g., 3 or 5 years); principal + interest returned at maturity
💡 Think About It

Why does Fixed Deposit earn higher interest than a Savings Account? Because the money is locked in for a longer period, giving the bank certainty of funds — the bank rewards this with a higher rate.

04

Interest and the Power of Compounding

Interest: The amount charged for borrowing money, or the amount gained by lending money, usually expressed as a percentage.
Quarterly: Occurring four times a year, at the end of every three months.

Banks not only keep deposits safe but also lend them to businesses or other people. In return, banks pay depositors interest — extra money paid periodically (monthly, quarterly, or annually) that helps savings grow over time.

📐 Compounding — Worked Example

Suppose you deposit ₹1,000 at 6% interest per year.

End of Year 1: ₹1,000 + 6% of ₹1,000 = ₹1,000 + ₹60 = ₹1,060

End of Year 2: ₹1,060 + 6% of ₹1,060 = ₹1,060 + ₹63.60 = ₹1,123.60

→ Notice: interest in Year 2 (₹63.60) > Year 1 (₹60) — you earn interest on previous interest!

After 12 years at 6%: ₹1,000 grows to approximately ₹2,012.20

This is the magic of Compounding — earning interest on interest, leading to exponential growth over time.

📜 The Magic of Compounding — King and Sage Story

A king from Ambalappuzha, Kerala, known for his love of chess, challenged a visiting sage. The king promised any reward if the sage won. The sage asked for a simple reward: one grain of rice on the 1st square of a chessboard, two on the 2nd, four on the 3rd — doubling each time for all 64 squares.

The king agreed, thinking it trivial. But he soon discovered the terrifying power of exponential growth:

Square 8 → 128 grains | Square 16 → 32,768 grains | Square 32 → over 210 crore grains!

Lesson: Compounding — like doubling — starts small but grows into astronomical sums. This is exactly how savings grow over long periods.

📒 Passbook

A passbook is a diary-like document provided by the bank that records all receipts (credit) and payment (debit) transactions. It can be updated regularly at the bank.

Debit: Taking money out of an account. Credit: Receiving money in an account.

05

Offer Loans or Credit — How Banks Make Money

Loan: An amount borrowed from banks or financial institutions, with the obligation to repay it with interest at a later time.

Banks lend money to borrowers as loans for purposes such as buying a house or vehicle, funding education, purchasing machinery, raw materials, launching new products, etc. After a specified period, the borrower repays the loan amount along with interest.

🔑 Don’t Miss Out — How Banks Earn Profit

Banks pay lower interest rates on savings deposits to depositors and charge higher interest rates on loans from borrowers. The difference in interest rates is the primary source of income for banks.

Example: Anand deposits ₹200 at 2% interest. Bank lends ₹200 to Shreya at 5% interest.

Shreya repays: ₹200 + ₹10 (5% of ₹200) = ₹210

Bank pays Anand: ₹200 + ₹4 (2% of ₹200) = ₹204

Bank earns: ₹210 − ₹204 = ₹6

Note: Banks maintain reserve money and do NOT lend all deposits as loans.

Fig 8.8 Simplified diagram to illustrate how banks make money
Fig. 8.8. Simplified diagram to illustrate how banks make money (Source: NCERT)
06

Jan Dhan Yojana — Banking Revolution in India

🏦 Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY)

Before 2014: Only 15 crore Indians had bank accounts; most relied on cash.

Launched in 2014 with the aim of giving every Indian — especially low-income earners — access to a bank account without requiring a minimum balance or fees.

Result: Over 50 crore accounts opened — mainly by women.

Impact: Workers receive wages directly into accounts. Students receive scholarships directly. Farmers borrow for agriculture/business. Direct transfers have reduced middlemen and ensure timely disbursement of funds.

07

Other Financial Institutions

Apart from commercial banks, other institutions form a crucial part of India’s financial infrastructure:

InstitutionRole / Focus
Post OfficesOffer savings schemes like National Savings Certificates (NSC), Kisan Vikas Patra, Sukanya Samriddhi Accounts. Vast network even in remote areas — popular savings option.
Industrial Finance Corporation of India (IFCI)Funds businesses in specific sectors like power and textiles.
NABARD (National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development)Supports rural development by funding banks that give loans for farming, village industries, and infrastructure like roads and irrigation.
Reserve Bank of India (RBI)Central bank — supervises the entire Indian banking system.
08

Reserve Bank of India (RBI) — Banker to Banks

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is India’s central bank — it supervises and regulates the Indian banking system. Every country has a central bank that supervises and manages policies related to its banking system.

Key Facts about RBI

  • Established in 1935; performed some functions of a central bank initially.
  • After Independence, transferred to the Government of India.
  • Functioning as the central bank / banker of banks since 1949.
  • Maintains accounts of other banks and facilitates exchange of funds between them.
  • Provides loans to banks and the government.
  • Sole authority for printing and distributing Indian currency (banknotes).
  • Fixes Benchmark Interest Rates — the base rate for lending money to commercial banks.
⭐ Benchmark Interest Rate — UPSC Key Term

Benchmark Interest Rate (also called Repo Rate in practice) is the base interest rate that the RBI fixes for lending money to commercial banks.

When RBI raises the benchmark rate → borrowing becomes costlier for banks → banks raise lending rates → credit in the economy contracts → inflation cools.

When RBI lowers the benchmark rate → borrowing becomes cheaper → banks lower lending rates → credit expands → economic activity stimulated.

This is the primary monetary policy tool of the RBI to control inflation and stimulate/cool the economy.

RBI also sets rules and regulations regarding: (1) Printing and distributing Indian currency like banknotes; (2) Fixing of the benchmark interest rates.

🏛️ RBI Office Trivia — Yaksha & Yakshi

The entrance of the RBI office in Delhi is flanked by statues of a Yaksha and Yakshi. According to Hindu mythology, Yakshas are demigods who guard treasures for Kubera, the God of Wealth. RBI is aptly compared to Kubera — with its sole right to issue currency and role as banker to all banks!

📜 Think About It — Temples as Ancient Banks

In ancient India, temples acted like banks. They did not accept public deposits like modern banks, but they lent money to artisans, merchants, and local governments for infrastructure. Contracts were etched on copper plates.

Example: An inscription from Kodumbalur, Tamil Nadu (13th century) refers to communities that borrowed money from the Tirumudukunramudaiya-Nayanar temple with an agreement to pay interest.

This shows that credit systems, interest, and financial contracts are not modern inventions — they are deeply rooted in Indian history.

09

Payment Modes and Systems

Payment System: A mechanism that facilitates the clearing and settlement of financial transactions, allowing individuals, businesses, and organisations to transfer funds between each other.
PIN (Personal Identification Number): A numeric code (usually 4–6 digits) used for authentication and security in financial transactions like ATMs and debit cards.

Payment modes and systems are another key part of financial infrastructure. They help with the transfer of money from one person to another.

Withdrawing Cash from Bank Deposits

Two main ways to withdraw savings:

  1. Withdrawal Slip: Fill out a withdrawal slip at the bank, submit at the cash counter, collect cash.
  2. ATM (Automated Teller Machine): Banks provide debit cards. ATMs are self-service mini-banks available 24×7 at public places (bus depots, markets, railway stations, airports, malls). Steps: Insert card → Type amount → Input PIN → Collect cash.
10

Cheque — Transferring Money Between Accounts

A cheque is a paper instrument that allows you to pay someone directly from your bank account. The bank provides a cheque book with multiple cheques.

Example: To pay ₹5,000 to Rohan, write a cheque with the amount, Rohan’s name, and your signature. Rohan deposits it in his bank. The amount is debited from your account and credited to Rohan’s account.

Fig 8.14 Cheque — components explained
Fig. 8.14. A Cheque — Parts and Explanation (Source: NCERT)
Component of a ChequeDetails
Name of payeeName of the person/entity you wish to pay
DateDate on which the cheque is issued
Amount in wordsWritten amount in rupees (words)
Amount in numbersWritten amount in numerals
Cheque issuer’s account numberYour bank account number
SignatureWhere the cheque issuer signs
Cheque numberUnique number for the cheque leaf
MICR CodeMagnetic Ink Character Recognition code for automated processing
MICR BandThe band at the bottom containing machine-readable data

Limitation of Cheque: Requires physically visiting a bank and takes time. Electronic methods overcome this.

11

Electronic Payment Methods

MethodHow It WorksKey Feature
Debit Card + POS MachineSwipe/insert debit card at Point of Sale (POS) machine → enter amount → enter PIN → instant deductionUsed at retail stores; no cash needed
Internet Banking (Netbanking)Access bank’s website or mobile app using computer/smartphone to check balance, transaction history, and transfer moneyAnytime, anywhere access
Mobile Payments / UPIDigital payment apps (e.g., BHIM) using UPI; scan QR code or enter phone number of recipient → pay instantlyNo bank details needed; real-time transfer
12

UPI — India’s Gift to the World of Payment Systems

Traditionally, transferring funds required cheques — time-consuming and complex, discouraging many from using banking, leading to heavy reliance on cash (billions of rupees used daily without records).

📱 About UPI

In 2016, the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) launched UPI (Unified Payments Interface) — a fast, secure digital payment system enabling transfer of funds.

UPI allows instant money transfers using a QR code or the phone number of the recipient. It reduces the need for physical passbook updates and allows users to check balances and track transactions anytime on their phone.

How UPI Works — Step by Step

Fig 8.18 Process of a digital transaction using UPI
Fig. 8.18. Process of a digital transaction between a buyer and seller using UPI (Source: NCERT)
  1. Kumar scans Piyush’s (vegetable vendor) QR code using a payment app, enters his UPI PIN and amount.

  2. The app sends a payment request to Kumar’s bank (Payer’s Bank).

  3. Payer’s bank forwards the request to NPCI. NPCI decrypts the request, verifies the UPI PIN, and processes the transfer.

  4. Funds are received by Piyush’s bank (Payee’s Bank).

  5. Piyush receives the payment in his bank account.

🌍 UPI Goes Global

India’s digital payments revolution is expanding across borders. Nepal was the first country to adopt India’s UPI as a payment platform in 2022.

Today, nations such as UAE, France, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, and Mauritius have adopted UPI. More countries are showing interest. UPI gained massive popularity during COVID-19 pandemic for supporting cashless transactions while maintaining social distancing.

Its user-friendly design in multiple languages makes it accessible to everyone — truly India’s gift to the world of payment systems!

13

Stock Market — Shares, BSE, and Financial Markets

Share: A unit of ownership in a company, representing a portion of its capital stock.
Investment: The act of putting resources in assets expected to gain value over time.
Stock Exchange: Marketplace where financial securities like stocks are traded.

Imagine the stock market like a giant online book store — but instead of buying books, people buy and sell shares.

A share is a part-ownership in a company. When you buy a share, you become a part-owner. The more shares you own, the higher your ownership. A collection of shares is called a stock.

🏦 Why Buy/Sell Shares?

For companies: Issuing shares helps them raise funds for operations — expansion, new products, machinery, etc. without taking loans.

For individuals: Holding stocks lets individuals grow their savings when share prices rise. It also offers dividends (share of profits).

Key Facts — Stock Market in India

  • The Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) was established in 1875 — one of the oldest stock exchanges in the world.
  • Earlier, share transactions were conducted manually using paper tickets; now replaced by digital transactions via advanced computers.
  • Stock Market Crash: Share prices of many companies fall simultaneously.
  • Stock Market Boom: Share prices of many companies rise simultaneously.

Why Do Share Prices Fluctuate?

FactorEffect on Share Price
Company performance (good products, profits)Price rises — more people want the share
Company problems (bad product, workers’ strike, loss)Price falls — fewer people want the share
Government policy changes (new laws, tax rules)Can cause fluctuations either way
Political instability / warsUsually causes fall in share prices
Economic shocks (pandemic, natural disaster, commodity price changes)Usually causes fall; uncertainty rises
Tax Rules: Tax is a compulsory contribution by individuals/businesses to the government on income and profit; also added to the cost of goods, services, and transactions.
Economic Shocks: Sudden unexpected events causing big changes in a country’s economy — natural disasters, wars, pandemics, sudden policy changes, commodity price swings.
14

Financial Frauds and How to Prevent Them

OTP (One-Time Password): A unique temporary code (letters or numbers) used for verifying identity or authorising any transaction.

Digital payments have made life easier, but users must beware of fraud and scams. Fraudsters trick people through fake calls or messages to download harmful apps or share bank details/OTPs. This gives them access to the user’s device, enabling them to steal personal data and drain money from bank accounts.

⚠️ BEWARE — Digital Safety Rules
  • Never share personal information like phone number, account number, home address, passwords, or OTPs with strangers.
  • Avoid clicking unknown links or videos received through messages.
  • Don’t store sensitive banking information (passwords, debit card PINs) on devices.
  • In case of fraud, report via Helpline 1930 or the National Cybercrime Reporting Portal: cybercrime.gov.in
15

Key Glossary — All Important Terms

TermDefinition
Financial InfrastructureNetwork of banks, payment systems, stock markets, and other financial institutions that facilitate financial transactions and manage money.
BankA financial institution that collects money as deposits and lends it as loans.
DepositsMoney placed in a bank account; can be withdrawn per terms; often earns interest.
InterestAmount charged for borrowing money or gained by lending; expressed as percentage.
CompoundingEarning interest on previous interest, leading to exponential growth over time.
QuarterlyOccurring four times a year (every three months).
LoanAmount borrowed from bank/financial institution with obligation to repay with interest.
DebitTaking money out of an account.
CreditReceiving money in an account.
PassbookDiary-like document recording all bank transactions (debits and credits).
ATMAutomated Teller Machine — self-service mini-bank available 24×7 for cash withdrawal.
PINPersonal Identification Number — 4–6 digit numeric code for authentication.
ChequePaper instrument allowing payment directly from bank account.
MICRMagnetic Ink Character Recognition — machine-readable code at the bottom of a cheque.
POS MachinePoint of Sale Machine — device at retail stores for debit card payments.
UPIUnified Payments Interface — digital payment system by NPCI enabling instant fund transfers.
NPCINational Payments Corporation of India — launched UPI in 2016.
BHIMBharat Interface for Money — UPI-based digital payment app.
OTPOne-Time Password — temporary code for verifying identity/transactions.
ShareUnit of ownership in a company representing a portion of its capital stock.
StockA collection of shares in a company.
Stock ExchangeMarketplace where financial securities like stocks are traded.
BSEBombay Stock Exchange — established 1875; one of the oldest stock exchanges in the world.
InvestmentAct of putting resources in assets expected to gain value over time.
RBIReserve Bank of India — India’s central bank; banker to banks; established 1935.
Benchmark Interest RateBase interest rate fixed by RBI for lending money to commercial banks.
NABARDNational Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development — supports rural development.
PMJDYPradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana — financial inclusion scheme launched 2014.
NSCNational Savings Certificates — savings scheme offered through post offices.
Economic ShockSudden unexpected events causing large changes in an economy.
TaxCompulsory contribution to government on income, profit, goods, and services.
Benchmark Interest RateThe base interest rate that the RBI fixes for lending money to commercial banks. Key monetary policy tool — raising it contracts credit/cools inflation; lowering it stimulates economic activity.
Debit CardA card issued by a bank linked to the account holder’s bank account; used to withdraw cash from ATMs or make payments at POS machines.
Net Banking / Internet BankingElectronic tool allowing account holders to check balances, view transaction history, and transfer money through a bank’s website or mobile app.
QR CodeQuick Response Code — a machine-readable barcode used in UPI payments to identify the payee and initiate a payment.
IFCIIndustrial Finance Corporation of India — funds businesses in specific sectors like power and textiles.
Kisan Vikas PatraA savings scheme offered by Post Offices that doubles the invested amount after a fixed period.
Sukanya Samriddhi AccountA Post Office savings scheme for girl children, offering high interest rates for long-term savings.
NSCNational Savings Certificates — fixed-income savings instrument offered by Post Offices.
Stock Market CrashWhen share prices of many companies fall simultaneously — caused by poor company performance, economic shocks, wars, policy changes.
Stock Market BoomWhen share prices of many companies rise simultaneously — indicates strong economic confidence and good corporate performance.
📌 Important Sidebar Terms — Frequently Asked in UPSC/State PCS

The following terms appeared in the green sidebar boxes of the NCERT chapter — these are definitional terms often tested directly:

TermExact NCERT Definition
BankA financial institution that collects money from people in the form of deposits and lends money to people or borrowers as loans.
DepositsMoney placed in a bank account that can be withdrawn as per the terms of the bank and often earns interest.
QuarterlyIt means occurring four times a year, at the end of every three months.
InterestIt is the amount charged for borrowing money or the amount gained by lending money, which is usually expressed as a percentage.
DebitTaking money out of an account.
CreditReceiving money in an account.
LoanAn amount borrowed from banks or financial institutions, with the obligation to repay it with interest at a later time.
Payment SystemA mechanism that facilitates the clearing and settlement of financial transactions, allowing individuals, businesses, and organisations to transfer funds between each other.
PINA numeric code (usually 4 to 6 digits) used for authentication and security in various applications, especially for financial transactions like ATMs, debit cards, etc.
ShareA share is a unit of ownership in a company, representing a portion of its capital stock.
InvestmentThe act of putting resources in assets expected to gain value over time.
Stock ExchangeMarketplace where financial securities like stocks are traded.
OTPIt stands for One-Time Password — a unique temporary code made up of letters or numbers that is used for verifying identity or authorising any transaction.
Benchmark Interest RateThe base interest rate that the RBI fixes for lending money to commercial banks.
Economic ShocksSudden unexpected events that cause big changes in a country’s economy — how people earn, spend, and save money. For instance, natural disasters (earthquakes, floods, etc.), war, pandemic, sudden changes in government policies, prices of commodities, etc., can bring economic shock to an economy.
Tax RulesTax is a compulsory contribution given by individuals and businesses respectively to the government on income and profit. It is also added to the cost of some goods, services, and transactions. The government sets rules regarding the payment of various taxes.

📌 Chapter Summary — Before We Move On

  • Financial infrastructure comprises banks, payment systems, stock markets, and financial institutions — they enable smooth monetary transactions.
  • Banks hold deposits (savings, current, fixed deposit accounts), offer loans, and facilitate transfers — earning profit from the interest rate spread.
  • Compounding makes savings grow exponentially over time — the earlier you start, the larger the corpus.
  • RBI (est. 1935, central bank since 1949) is the banker of banks — it regulates the entire banking system, issues currency, and sets benchmark interest rates.
  • Payment modes include cash, cheques, debit cards, net banking, and UPI — UPI launched in 2016 by NPCI has revolutionised digital payments in India and globally.
  • PMJDY (2014) opened 50+ crore accounts, mostly for women, and dramatically expanded financial inclusion in India.
  • Stock markets (BSE est. 1875) allow companies to raise funds via shares, and individuals to invest savings — prices fluctuate based on company performance, policies, and economic conditions.
  • Financial infrastructure promotes savings, credit, and investment — ultimately contributing to national prosperity.
  • Digital fraud is a major risk — never share OTPs; report fraud to Helpline 1930 or cybercrime.gov.in.

Practice MCQs

UPSC / State PCS Standard  ·  Banks & the Magic of Finance

20 Questions  ·  Tap “Show Answer” to reveal the correct answer & explanation

Q1
Which of the following best defines ‘Financial Infrastructure’?
  1. Physical infrastructure like roads and railways that support the economy
  2. A network of banks, payment systems, stock markets, and financial institutions that facilitate financial transactions and manage money
  3. Only the banking system of a country
  4. The system of taxation and government spending
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: B

Financial infrastructure is a network of banks, payment systems, stock markets, and other financial institutions that help people, businesses, and the government facilitate financial transactions and manage money. Physical infrastructure refers to roads, railways, etc.

Q2
Which type of bank account earns NO interest but allows unlimited deposits and withdrawals?
  1. Savings Account
  2. Fixed Deposit Account
  3. Current Account
  4. Recurring Deposit Account
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: C

Current Account is designed for businesses and traders who make frequent transactions. It does not earn interest but has no limits on the number of deposits or withdrawals.

Q3
If you deposit ₹10,000 at 12% interest per year and do not withdraw for 3 years, what will be the approximate amount due to compounding?
  1. ₹13,600
  2. ₹14,049
  3. ₹13,000
  4. ₹12,000
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: B

Year 1: ₹10,000 × 1.12 = ₹11,200 | Year 2: ₹11,200 × 1.12 = ₹12,544 | Year 3: ₹12,544 × 1.12 ≈ ₹14,049. Simple interest would give only ₹13,600 — compounding gives more because interest is earned on previous interest.

Q4
The Reserve Bank of India was established in which year?
  1. 1947
  2. 1949
  3. 1935
  4. 1942
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: C

RBI was established in 1935. After Independence, it was transferred to the Government of India and has been functioning as India’s central bank since 1949. Note the distinction: established 1935, functioning as full central bank since 1949.

Q5
What is the primary source of income for commercial banks?
  1. Government grants and subsidies
  2. Service charges and ATM fees
  3. The difference between the interest rate charged on loans and the interest rate paid on deposits
  4. Profits from trading in stock markets
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: C

Banks pay lower interest rates on deposits and charge higher rates on loans. This difference — called the ‘interest rate spread’ or ‘net interest margin’ — is the primary source of bank income. For example: paying 2% to depositors and charging 5% from borrowers earns the bank 3%.

Q6
Consider the following statements about PMJDY:
1. It was launched in 2014.
2. It aimed to provide bank accounts without minimum balance requirement.
3. Over 50 crore accounts have been opened, mainly by women.
Which of the above statements is/are correct?
  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 1 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2, and 3
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: D

All three statements are correct. PMJDY was launched in 2014, aimed at zero-balance bank accounts for every Indian (especially low-income earners). Over 50 crore accounts have been opened, mainly by women, enabling direct benefit transfers and eliminating middlemen.

Q7
Which institution launched UPI (Unified Payments Interface) in 2016?
  1. Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
  2. State Bank of India (SBI)
  3. National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI)
  4. Ministry of Finance, Government of India
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: C

UPI was launched in 2016 by NPCI (National Payments Corporation of India). While RBI regulates payment systems, NPCI is the body that built and launched UPI. BHIM (Bharat Interface for Money) is a popular app built on UPI.

Q8
MICR, as printed on a cheque, stands for:
  1. Magnetic Ink Code Recognition
  2. Magnetic Ink Character Recognition
  3. Manual Ink Character Rendering
  4. Machine Integrated Cheque Reading
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: B

MICR stands for Magnetic Ink Character Recognition. The MICR band at the bottom of a cheque contains machine-readable characters printed in magnetic ink, enabling automated and error-free processing of cheques by bank computers.

Q9
Which of the following is NOT a function of the Reserve Bank of India?
  1. Printing and distributing Indian currency
  2. Fixing benchmark interest rates
  3. Providing loans to commercial banks
  4. Directly accepting deposits from the general public
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: D

RBI does NOT accept deposits from the general public — that is done by commercial banks. RBI’s functions: sole authority to print/distribute currency, fix benchmark interest rates, maintain accounts of other banks, provide loans to banks and government, and supervise the banking system.

Q10
The Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) was established in which year?
  1. 1935
  2. 1947
  3. 1875
  4. 1991
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: C

BSE was established in 1875 and is one of the oldest stock exchanges in the world. Earlier, transactions were conducted manually using paper tickets — today they are done digitally through advanced computers.

Q11
Which was the FIRST country to adopt India’s UPI as a payment platform?
  1. Bhutan
  2. UAE
  3. Sri Lanka
  4. Nepal
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: D

Nepal was the first country to adopt India’s UPI as a payment platform in 2022. Countries that have since adopted UPI include UAE, France, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, and Mauritius. UPI is truly India’s gift to the world of payment systems.

Q12
In the context of banking, ‘compounding’ refers to:
  1. A bank combining multiple small loans into one large loan
  2. Earning interest on the principal amount only
  3. Earning interest on both the original principal and on previously accumulated interest
  4. A bank’s method of calculating service charges
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: C

Compounding means earning interest on the original principal AND on interest already accumulated. Example: ₹1,000 earns ₹60 in Year 1 → Year 2 interest is calculated on ₹1,060 (not ₹1,000), giving ₹63.60. This exponential growth is the “magic of compounding.”

Q13
Consider the following about NABARD:
1. It stands for National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development.
2. It directly gives loans to farmers.
3. It supports rural development by funding banks that give loans for farming and rural infrastructure.
Which is/are correct?
  1. 1 only
  2. 1 and 3 only
  3. 2 and 3 only
  4. 1, 2, and 3
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: B

Statements 1 and 3 are correct. NABARD is an apex institution — it does NOT directly lend to farmers. It refinances and funds banks/cooperatives that lend to farmers. Statement 2 is incorrect.

Q14
In a Fixed Deposit account, what happens when the deposit matures?
  1. The depositor loses interest for the remaining period
  2. The bank returns only the principal amount
  3. The bank returns the original amount plus accumulated interest
  4. The amount is automatically rolled into a savings account without interest
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: C

On maturity of an FD, the bank returns the principal PLUS accumulated interest. FD interest rates are higher than savings accounts because the money is locked in for a fixed period (e.g., 3 or 5 years), giving the bank certainty of funds.

Q15
The statues at the entrance of RBI’s Delhi office depict:
  1. Lakshmi and Ganesha — deities of wealth and prosperity
  2. Yaksha and Yakshi — mythological guardians of Kubera’s treasures
  3. Saraswati and Vishnu — representing knowledge and preservation
  4. Two lions — representing strength of the Indian economy
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: B

The RBI Delhi office entrance is flanked by Yaksha and Yakshi statues. In Hindu mythology, Yakshas are demigods guarding treasures for Kubera, the God of Wealth. RBI is metaphorically compared to Kubera for its sole right to issue currency.

Q16
When share prices of a large number of companies fall simultaneously, it is called a:
  1. Stock Market Boom
  2. Stock Market Correction
  3. Stock Market Crash
  4. Bull Run
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: C

A Stock Market Crash occurs when share prices of many companies fall simultaneously. A Stock Market Boom (Bull Market) is the opposite — widespread price rise. A ‘correction’ is a smaller, temporary decline, not as severe as a crash.

Q17
Which payment method requires the payee to physically visit a bank to collect payment?
  1. UPI transaction
  2. Net banking transfer
  3. Cheque
  4. Debit card swipe at POS
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: C

A cheque requires the payee to physically deposit it at their bank — it takes time and requires physical presence. This is the key limitation of cheques compared to UPI, net banking, or debit card transactions, which enable instant remote transfers.

Q18
Which of the following savings schemes is offered by Indian Post Offices?
  1. Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana
  2. Kisan Vikas Patra and Sukanya Samriddhi Account
  3. Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana
  4. Atal Pension Yojana
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: B

Post Offices offer NSC (National Savings Certificates), Kisan Vikas Patra, and Sukanya Samriddhi Accounts. PMJDY is a banking financial inclusion scheme; RSBY is health insurance; APY is a pension scheme — none are post office savings products.

Q19
In case of digital/cyber fraud, which helpline number should one call in India?
  1. 100 (Police Emergency)
  2. 112 (National Emergency Number)
  3. 1930 (Cybercrime Helpline)
  4. 14400 (Consumer Helpline)
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: C

Helpline 1930 is the dedicated cyber fraud reporting number in India. The National Cybercrime Reporting Portal (cybercrime.gov.in) is also available. Both are specifically mentioned in the NCERT textbook.

Q20
An inscription from Kodumbalur, Tamil Nadu (13th century) referenced in the NCERT chapter illustrates that:
  1. Post offices existed in ancient India
  2. Ancient India had no formal banking system
  3. Temples in ancient India functioned as lending institutions charging interest
  4. The British introduced the concept of interest in India
Show Answer
✓ Correct Answer: C

The Kodumbalur inscription shows communities borrowed from the Tirumudukunramudaiya-Nayanar temple with an agreement to pay interest. Temples in ancient India lent money to artisans, merchants, and governments — acting like banks — with contracts etched on copper plates. Credit systems predate colonial rule in India.

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