BANKING AFFAIRS

BANKING GENERAL KNOWLEDGE

Question [CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
As we all know, Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) is the percentage of the deposits keep in reserve with them. This ratio is also known as
A
Repo rate
B
Reverse repo rate
C
SLR
D
Liquidity ratio
Explanation: 

Detailed explanation-1: -Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) is the share of a bank’s total deposit that is mandated by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to be maintained with the latter as reserves in the form of liquid cash. Click here to know about SLR & Repo Rate. Current cash reserve ratio is at 4%, this will be changed to 4.5% from May 21st.

Detailed explanation-2: -What is CRR? In simple terms, the Cash reserve ratio is a certain percentage of cash that all banks have to keep with the RBI as a deposit. This percentage is fixed by the RBI and is changed from time to time by the central bank itself. Currently, the CRR is fixed at 3%.

Detailed explanation-3: -The Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) refers to the share of Net Demand and Time Liabilities that banks have to hold as balances with the RBI. The objective of CRR is to keep inflation under control. During high inflation in the economy, the central bank raises the CRR to lower the bank’s loanable funds.

Detailed explanation-4: -Under cash reserve ratio (CRR), the commercial banks have to hold a certain minimum amount of deposit as reserves with the central bank. The percentage of cash required to be kept in reserves as against the bank’s total deposits, is called the Cash Reserve Ratio.

Detailed explanation-5: -Definition: Also known as Cash Reserve Ratio, it is the percentage of deposits which commercial banks are required to keep as cash according to the directions of the central bank.

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