Context:
The Union Budget 2026 proposes measures to strengthen India’s corporate bond market, aiming to reduce the excessive burden on banks and improve the resilience of the financial system.
Key Highlights:
- Financial Sector Reform
- Indian banks currently hold about 60–65% of non-financial corporate debt, indicating excessive dependence on the banking system.
- Since 2017, the government has infused over ₹3.2 lakh crore into public sector banks (PSBs) for recapitalisation.
- Market Development Measures
- The Budget proposes policies to expand the corporate bond market and shift part of corporate financing to capital markets.
- Initiatives such as the Infrastructure Risk Guarantee Fund and Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) aim to diversify financing sources.
- Structural Issues
- India’s corporate bond market is only about 15–16% of GDP, much smaller than in advanced economies.
- Heavy reliance on bank lending exposes banks to long-term infrastructure risks.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Corporate Bond Market
- Market where corporations raise funds through debt securities issued to investors.
- Provides long-term financing for infrastructure and industrial expansion.
- REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts)
- Investment vehicles that own or finance income-generating real estate assets.
- Allow investors to earn income from property without direct ownership.
- Monetary Policy Transmission
- The mechanism through which RBI policy rate changes influence borrowing costs, investment, and economic activity.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Structural Weakness of India’s Financial System
- Overdependence on banks results in concentration of credit risk.
- Banks borrow through short-term deposits but lend long-term to infrastructure projects, creating maturity mismatches.
- Impact on Economic Stability
- Concentrated credit exposure increases financial sector vulnerability to economic shocks.
- Weakens monetary policy transmission.
- Benefits of a Strong Corporate Bond Market
- Enables better risk distribution among investors.
- Provides long-term financing for infrastructure projects.
- Frees bank credit for SMEs and priority sectors.
- Way Forward
- Strengthen regulatory frameworks for corporate bond issuance.
- Improve market liquidity and investor participation.
- Encourage institutional investors such as pension funds and insurance companies.
- Develop credit enhancement mechanisms to improve bond ratings.
UPSC Relevance:
- GS Paper III: Banking sector reforms, financial markets, capital markets development.
- Prelims: Corporate bonds, REITs, financial sector reforms.
