Which one of the following correctly represents the three key sub-indices of the Financial Inclusion Index (FI-Index) of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)?

Question Which one of the following correctly represents the three key sub-indices of the Financial Inclusion Index (FI-Index) of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)?
ACredit access, Insurance depth, and Pension coverage
BBanking access, GDP contribution, and Financial literacy
CAccess, Usage, and Quality ✓
DAccess, Affordability, and Transparency
The Three Sub-Indices — RBI FI-Index
🏦 Access Weight: 35% Measures availability of financial services and infrastructure — bank branches, ATMs, business correspondents per 1,000 sq km and per 100,000 population. Do people have a physical or digital means to access financial services?
💳 Usage Weight: 45% Highest weighted sub-index. Measures actual usage of financial services — deposits, credit, insurance, pension, remittances. Access alone is not enough; are people actually using financial services? Usage reflects real financial inclusion.
Quality Weight: 20% Measures quality of financial services — financial literacy, consumer protection, grievance redressal. Are the services provided meeting the needs of users and delivering value? Captures outcomes, not just availability or use.
Why Each Option is Right or Wrong
A
✗ Credit access, Insurance depth, Pension coverage These are components/indicators within sub-indices, not the sub-indices themselves. Credit access feeds into the Usage sub-index. Insurance and pension are also Usage metrics. None of these are the three top-level sub-indices.
B
✗ Banking access, GDP contribution, Financial literacy Completely fabricated. GDP contribution and Financial literacy are not sub-indices of the FI-Index. Financial literacy is a metric under the Quality sub-index, but is not itself a sub-index. GDP has no role in FI-Index calculation.
C
✓ Access, Usage, and Quality — THE CORRECT ANSWER Confirmed from RBI’s official documentation. The FI-Index = composite of Access (35%) + Usage (45%) + Quality (20%). Ranges from 0 (complete financial exclusion) to 100 (complete financial inclusion). Published annually by RBI in July for the preceding March.
D
✗ Access, Affordability, and Transparency “Affordability” and “Transparency” are not sub-indices of the RBI FI-Index. The third sub-index is Quality, not Affordability or Transparency. This option is a deliberate distractor — “Access” is correct but the other two are wrong.
RBI FI-Index — Complete Fact Sheet for UPSC
ParameterDetail
Full nameFinancial Inclusion Index (FI-Index)
Published byReserve Bank of India (RBI)
LaunchedAugust 2021 (first published for period ending March 2021)
Published whenAnnually, in July — for the preceding March 31
Range0 (complete financial exclusion) to 100 (complete financial inclusion)
Three Sub-IndicesAccess (35%) · Usage (45%) · Quality (20%)
No base yearDesigned without a “base year” — captures information across all dimensions in a single value
Dimensions covered97 indicators across banking, investments, insurance, postal, and pension sectors
Usage sub-index detailHighest weight (45%) — covers deposits, credit, insurance, investments, pension, remittances
Quality sub-index detailFinancial literacy · Consumer protection · Grievance redressal · Ease of access to services
PurposeCapture the extent of financial inclusion in India across all dimensions in a composite single-value index · Inform policy decisions on financial inclusion
Memory Trick
🧠 A-U-Q — Three Sub-Indices of RBI FI-Index
A-U-Q = Access · Usage · Quality: Remember “AUQ” — Are You Qualified? Access (can I reach a bank?) → Usage (am I actually using it?) → Quality (is it good?). The logical progression: first you need access, then you use it, then you evaluate quality.
Usage has the highest weight (45%): Usage > Access > Quality in weighting — 45% : 35% : 20%. “Usage” matters most because access without usage is meaningless (e.g., having a bank branch nearby but no one using it). The RBI prioritises actual usage over mere infrastructure.
Trap: Option (D) has “Access” correct but swaps Quality for “Affordability”: The third sub-index is Quality — not affordability, not transparency. “Quality” covers financial literacy, consumer protection, and grievance redressal. Don’t be fooled by the plausible-sounding “Affordability.”

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