Create a custom practice set
Pick category, difficulty, number of questions, and time limit. Start instantly with your own quiz.
Generate QuizPick category, difficulty, number of questions, and time limit. Start instantly with your own quiz.
Generate QuizNo weekly quiz is published yet. Check the weekly page for the latest updates.
View Weekly PageFree practice for SSC, UPSC, Banking & Railway exams. No login required.
Answer: Decreases as society demands cleaner environments and adopts better technologies
The EKC suggests an inverted-U shaped relationship between income per capita and pollution. In early industrialization, growth prioritizes output over ecology. However, as nations become wealthier, citizens demand higher environmental standards, and the economy shifts toward services and clean technologies, leading to a reduction in environmental degradation.
Answer: If one condition for Pareto optimality cannot be met, achieving the remaining conditions may not lead to a second-best optimum
The Theory of the Second Best demonstrates that in the presence of market failures (like a monopoly or an externality) that cannot be eliminated, trying to enforce the other conditions of perfect competition might actually decrease overall economic welfare. It suggests that targeted, seemingly 'distortionary' interventions might be required to counteract the existing distortion.
Answer: A sovereign fiat currency and legal tender, exactly equivalent to physical cash
The e-Rupee (e₹) is a digital token issued by the RBI that represents legal tender. It holds the exact same value as physical paper currency and can be exchanged one-to-one with fiat money. Unlike volatile, decentralized cryptocurrencies, the CBDC is centralized, risk-free, and aims to reduce the massive costs associated with printing, storing, and transporting physical cash.
Answer: Restrictions such as quotas, embargoes, and stringent sanitary/phytosanitary standards
As the WTO has successfully driven down traditional tariff barriers globally, countries have increasingly resorted to NTBs to protect domestic industries. These include import quotas, complex licensing requirements, and excessively strict health, safety, or environmental standards that effectively block foreign goods from entering the domestic market.
Answer: Transaction, Precautionary, and Speculative motives
Keynes argued that people hold liquid cash rather than interest-bearing assets for three reasons: the Transaction motive (for daily purchases), the Precautionary motive (for unforeseen emergencies), and the Speculative motive (to profit from future changes in bond prices and interest rates). This theory fundamentally links money demand to the prevailing interest rate.
Answer: The distribution of the states' share of taxes among the individual States themselves
Vertical devolution determines the total percentage of the divisible tax pool that goes to the States as a whole (e.g., 41% as per the 15th FC). Horizontal devolution is the complex formula used to divide that aggregate state share *among* the various states, using criteria like population, forest cover, demographic performance, and income distance to ensure equity.
Answer: Ensuring financial inclusion by extending banking facilities to unbanked rural habitations
Launched in 2010, the Swabhiman campaign aimed to provide basic banking services to habitations with a population above 2,000. It utilized the Business Correspondent (BC) model and ICT-based accounts to bring the unbanked rural population into the formal financial fold, laying the groundwork for later schemes like PMJDY.
Answer: Significant state intervention and public sector investment in heavy industries and infrastructure
Authored by industrialists like J.R.D. Tata and G.D. Birla, the Bombay Plan surprisingly argued that the private sector lacked the massive capital required for post-independence reconstruction. It advocated for a strong, interventionist state to drive investments in heavy industries, infrastructure, and social services, heavily influencing India's subsequent mixed-economy and Five-Year Plan models.
Answer: Many sellers offering differentiated but substitutable products
Monopolistic competition blends elements of both perfect competition and monopoly. There are many buyers and sellers (like restaurants or soap brands), but firms differentiate their products through branding, quality, or features. This product differentiation gives each firm a slight degree of monopoly power to set prices within a narrow range.
Answer: Working-age population (15-59 years)
A demographic dividend occurs when the dependency ratio falls significantly because the working-age cohort expands relative to children and the elderly. However, this dividend is not automatic; it can only be reaped if the economy generates sufficient quality employment and invests heavily in the health and skill development of this workforce.
Answer: Concessional loans and grants to the world's poorest developing countries
While the IBRD lends to middle-income countries at market-linked rates, the IDA focuses exclusively on the poorest nations. It provides 'soft loans' (credits) with zero or very low interest rates and long grace periods, as well as outright grants, to fund projects that promote economic growth, reduce inequalities, and improve basic living conditions.
Answer: Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) received by an Indian manufacturing firm
The Capital/Financial account records transactions that alter the asset or liability status of a country's residents or government. FDI, Foreign Institutional Investment (FII), and external borrowings represent capital flows that change ownership of assets or create long-term liabilities. Exports, imports, remittances, and interest payments belong to the Current Account.
Answer: An impending economic recession or slowdown
Normally, long-term bonds offer higher yields than short-term bonds to compensate for time and inflation risk (a normal upward-sloping curve). An inverted yield curve occurs when short-term interest rates exceed long-term rates, indicating that investors expect future economic weakness, leading central banks to cut rates aggressively. It is a highly reliable historical predictor of recessions.
Answer: They are unsecured, short-term money market instruments issued by highly rated corporates
Commercial Papers are unsecured promissory notes issued by large, creditworthy corporations and primary dealers to meet their short-term working capital requirements. Because they are unsecured, only entities with high credit ratings can issue them, and they are always issued at a discount to their face value, maturing within 7 days to 1 year.
Answer: Real Estate development for luxury housing
Priority Sector Lending mandates banks to direct 40% of their credit to sectors vital for inclusive growth but which might otherwise struggle to secure formal finance. This includes agriculture, MSMEs, education, housing (up to specific affordable limits), and renewable energy. Luxury real estate is a commercial, profit-driven venture and is strictly excluded from PSL.
Answer: To simultaneously sell short-term securities and buy long-term securities to flatten the yield curve
Operation Twist involves the central bank buying long-term bonds (pushing their prices up and yields/interest rates down) while simultaneously selling short-term paper to absorb the excess liquidity created. This softens long-term borrowing rates for infrastructure and housing without increasing the overall money supply in the economy.
Answer: Hilton Young Commission (Royal Commission on Indian Currency and Finance)
The Royal Commission on Indian Currency and Finance, appointed in 1925 and chaired by Sir Hilton Young, recommended the creation of a central bank to separate the control of currency and credit from the government. This led to the RBI Act of 1934, and the bank commenced operations on April 1, 1935, before being nationalized in 1949.
Answer: Institutionalize financial discipline, reduce fiscal deficits, and manage public debt
The FRBM Act mandates the government to lay out a roadmap for reducing fiscal and revenue deficits, ensuring inter-generational equity in debt management. It aims to bring transparency and accountability to the fiscal management process, though its rigid targets have occasionally been relaxed during severe macroeconomic shocks or pandemics.
Answer: Recovery of loans granted to State Governments
Capital receipts are those government receipts that either create a liability (like fresh borrowings) or cause a reduction in the government's assets (like the recovery of past loans or disinvestment of PSUs). Tax revenues and dividends are 'Revenue Receipts' because they neither create liabilities nor reduce core assets.
Answer: Disinflation is a slowdown in the rate of inflation, while deflation is a negative inflation rate (falling prices)
Disinflation occurs when the inflation rate decreases over time (e.g., dropping from 8% to 4%); prices are still rising, just at a slower pace. Deflation, however, occurs when the general price level actually falls below zero (e.g., -2%), meaning money gains purchasing power, which is often a symptom of a severe economic recession.