Context:

RBI data (2019-20 β 2024-25) shows Indian householdsβ annual financial liabilities have grown at double the pace of annual financial assets creation.
Key Highlights:
Data Trends β Assets vs Liabilities Growth
- Financial assets added/year: β 48% (βΉ24.1 lakh cr in 2019-20 β βΉ35.6 lakh cr in 2024-25)
- Financial liabilities added/year: β 102% (βΉ7.5 lakh cr in 2019-20 β βΉ15.7 lakh cr in 2024-25)
- Assets as % of GDP β 12% (2019-20) β 10.8% (2024-25) β lower than pre-COVID
- Liabilities as % of GDP β 3.9% (2019-20) β peaked 6.2% (2023-24) β 4.7% (2024-25)
Changing Composition β Savings Shift
- Bank deposits remain dominant but moderate: share β 32% β 33.3%
- Absolute deposits β βΉ7.7 lakh cr β βΉ11.8 lakh cr
- Mutual funds surge: share β 2.6% β 13.1%
- New MF investments β 655% β βΉ4.7 lakh cr (2024-25)
- Currency share in assets fell 11.7% β 5.9%
- Life insurance / PF / Pension funds β largely stable shares
Concerns:
- Higher leverage β risk of household balance sheet stress
- Asset growth slowing β weak wealth creation momentum
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Household sector = largest net financial surplus sector of Indian economy (RBI)
- Household liabilities include β housing loans, personal loans, credit cards, gold loans
Relevant Mains Points:
- Macro link β household financial savings is a key driver of domestic resource mobilisation
- Post-COVID behaviour: shift from low-risk deposits to market-linked MF products β reflects financialisation of savings
Way Forward: targeted financial literacy + safe debt norms + diversified retail investment channels
