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Measurement of Household Financial Saving in India: A History of the Methodological Evolution


Dhritidyuti Bose and Partha Ray*

The paper traces the history of compilation of financial saving of the household sector in India. Against the backdrop of the evolution of various methodologies adopted by the institutions producing primary estimates of household financial saving and the progressive movement towards synthesis, the paper discusses the existing methodological impediments and the future directions in the compilation of financial saving in India.

Introduction

Economic development and the extent of sophistication in compilation of macro aggregates share a mutually reinforcing relationship, encompassing in their interaction a number of aspects like institutional arrangement of compilation, stage of development of the economy and its coverage in the statistics. Traditionally while compilation of national accounts aggregates comes under the purview of the Central Statistical Authority of a country, the central bank takes the primary responsibility of compiling monetary and balance of payments statistics. In most countries, saving is primarily compiled by the Central Statistical Office on the basis of the returns of the Income Tax Authority or some suitable survey-based methods. This is not the case for India where a miniscule fraction of the population pays income taxes and the saving numbers generated from sample surveys yield quite unreliable statistics.

In India within the standard three-sector classification, viz., households, public and private corporates, the saving of the household sector is further decomposed into a two-fold asset based classification, viz., physical and financial assets. There exists considerable dichotomy in the method of compilation of saving of these sectors. Saving of the public and private corporate sectors are compiled through an income-expenditure method. On the other hand, physical saving of the household sector is compiled through the production method (i.e., accounting for production of 'plant and machinery', 'construction' and 'change in inventory' by the household sector) as a residual after deducting public and private corporate investments from economy-wide capital formation while financial saving of the household sector is computed through an asset-based approach.

A distinguishing feature of the household sector is that it not only contributes entirely to its capital formation through its physical saving but also generates a financial surplus with the rest of the two sectors, which is its financial saving. On the other hand, in the case of each of the other two sectors, saving is supplemented by the net capital receipts from other sectors and the financial liabilities it incurs to others to finance capital formation. India follows a unique institutional arrangement relating to the compilation of saving between the Central Statistical Organisation (CSO) and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI); the estimations of household financial saving (except in life funds, provident and pension funds) and saving of the corporate sector are undertaken by the RBI, and the CSO compiles savings of the public sector and household sector in physical assets and in life funds, provident and pension funds.

This arrangement of distributing the compilation between two different agencies is, however, of recent origin. In the post-Independence period, the Indian economy was characterised by a multiplicity of saving estimates generated by number of institutions like the CSO, the RBI and the National Council of Applied Economic Research (NCAER). Such multiple estimates about the same number often created confusion among the users. In fact, insofar as the compilation of saving in the Indian economy is concerned, from the standpoint of availability of estimates, one may sub-divide the post-Independence period in three phases, viz., (a) 1950-51 to 1961-62 : when the CSO, the RBI, and the NCAER all published their independent saving estimates; (b) 1962-63 to 1987-88 : when after the NCAER stopped their publication of saving numbers, only the CSO and the RBI continued to publish their independent saving estimates; and (c) 1988-89 till date: when, following the recommendations of the Working Group on Savings (Chairman: Professor K.N. Raj, 1982; hereafter referred to as Raj Committee), the CSO and the RBI reconciled most of their differences and started publishing saving numbers on the basis of a uniform methodology and data base.

Against this periodisation, this paper is confined to a study of the methodology and its evolution in respect of household saving in financial assets. The rest of the paper is organised as follows. Section 2 deals with the conceptual and methodological issues in estimating financial saving. The evolution of estimation of household financial saving in India during the three phases is taken up in sections 3, 4 and 5. Section 6 is devoted to critiques of the Raj Committee Report and proposed recommendations of the Expert Group on Saving and Capital Formation (Chairman: Raja J. Chelliah hereafter referred to as Chelliah Committee). Instead of presenting concluding observations, section 7 addresses some future directions in the compilation of financial saving in India.

Section 2

Measurement of Financial Saving:
Conceptual and Methodological Issues

In a social accounting system there can be two approaches to measure saving of an economy. As per the first approach, saving may be calculated as the excess of current disposable income over current expenditures. Alternatively, saving can be measured from the balance sheet of the sector as the net result of changes (excluding revaluation) in all types of assets and liabilities. The two calculations are necessarily identical. Essentially, the same concept gets reflected in the three sequential flow accounts framed by the United Nations' System of National Accounts 1993 (UNSNA, 1993), as presented below:

First approach: Distribution and Use of Income Accounts:

S = I - E (1)

Second approach:

(a) Capital Accounts: S = [C + (CP-CR)] + F (2)

(b) Financial Accounts : F = [FA - FL] (3)

where, S = Saving; I = Current Disposable Income; E = Current Expenditure; C = Increase in sector's Physical Assets; CP = Capital Transfers Paid; CR = Capital Transfers Received; F = Financial Surplus (or Financial Saving); FA = Increase in sector's Financial Assets; and FL = Increase in sector's Financial Liabilities.

As the household sector in the Indian economy contributes entirely to its own capital formation in terms of its physical saving (i.e., CP = CR = 0), then equation (2) can be re-written in the case of the household sector as,

S = C + F (2)'

Thus, household saving can be measured as an aggregation of its physical saving and financial saving.

Although the procedure, prima facie, appears very straightforward, complexities arise, especially for developing economies like India. As the household sector here is a heterogeneous unorganised sector which does not maintain accounts, information relating to the household sector has to be compiled indirectly. A word of caution about the ambit of the generic entity called 'household sector' needs to be given here. Household is a residual sector. In the Indian situation whatever is not included under private corporate sector or public sector comes under households. The household sector comprises, apart from individuals, all non-government, non-corporate enterprises like sole proprietorships and partnerships owned and/or controlled by individuals and non-profit institutions which furnish educational, health, cultural, recreational and other social and community services to households (CSO, 1989).

Calculation of Financial Saving

Financial saving of the household sector can also be measured by two approaches. Adopting the first approach, it can be calculated by deducting the sector's physical saving from its total saving. Here, while the total household saving can be derived by the income approach, household physical saving, which is nothing but its capital formation, can be estimated as a residual by deducting from the economy-wide capital formation, the capital formation for public and private corporate sectors. As per the second approach, household sector's financial saving can be compiled directly as the increase in financial assets net of financial liabilities, excluding any revaluations. In the Indian context, financial saving of the household sector is estimated by the second approach, as it is a direct measurement and also is useful in analysing the volume and composition of the sector's financial portfolio. Thus, the basic framework for instrument-wise estimation of household financial saving is as follows:

Let W = {Wi} be the vector of the financial assets (i = 1, .., n), and L = {Lj} be the vector of financial liabilities (j = 1, .., m) in the economy, all in terms of national currency. In such a frame, the compilation of financial saving of the household sector involves the following three steps.

Step 1: Calculation of households' share in W and L, say Wh and Lh.

Step 2: Finding out the flows in Wh and Lh, say ∆Wh and ∆Lh.

Step 3: Financial Saving (F) is then given by, F = (∆Wh - ∆Lh), i.e.,

On balance, the household sector has a financial surplus vis-à-vis the other sectors of the economy, which is measured by the financial saving computed by netting out annual increases in financial liabilities (flow) from the annual rise of financial assets (flow).

Thus, there are two important issues in the calculation of financial saving of the household sector, viz., (a) choice of constituent items in W and L, and (b) finding out households' share in W and L.

As an economy develops and the financial sector deepens and widens, there is an increase of options for households to hold their financial assets. This widening of the menu may take the form of new financial instruments emerging for the households or new financial institutions sourcing their funds from households or existing institutions changing their fund mobilising pattern. For instance, in the early stages, the menu may be limited to very liquid instruments and very illiquid instruments. Later on, this widens to cover whole range of financial instruments offering differing degrees of liquidity and rates of return from which households can choose. The major financial assets of the household sector include currency, deposits, shares and debentures, life insurance funds, provident and pension funds, and claims on government. The household sector incurs liabilities from the banks, financial institutions, corporates, co-operatives and government. Therefore, the task of the compiler is to keep track of the innovations in the financial system and appropriate framing of financial asset and liability vectors of the household sector.

The first best solution for ascertaining the household sector's share in the chosen financial and asset liability vectors is from the detailed flow of funds (FOF) accounts compiled for the economy across its various sectors and financial instruments. As the household sector does not maintain its accounts, information is compiled on an indirect basis from data compiled with respect to other sectors. This indirect procedure of compilation varies from instrument to instrument. Some data like investment in life insurance funds and provident and pension funds are obtained as counterpart information from the accounts of other institutions; for other instruments like bank deposits both counterpart information and survey data are resorted to. In the cases of the other instruments like shares and debentures, the household sector's subscription is estimated as a residual after deducting from the aggregate issues, the investments made by the non-household sectors. However, the compilation and consolidation of FOF accounts of the economy are contingent upon receipt of information from the different sectors of the economy. Hence, the flows of funds accounts invariably suffer a time lag. Therefore, in such cases, the second-best solution becomes estimation of the household financial saving by whatever current data are available along with use of some benchmark ratios.

As a check the household financial saving can also be derived by the first approach. For instance, in the flow of funds accounts of the United States, the estimates of household financial saving are compiled by the balance sheet approach and the discrepancy with its alternative estimate derived from the income approach is shown. In the case of India, while the balance sheet approach is used in the estimation of household financial saving, no check is made by estimating with the alternate approach.

Section 3

The Early Stage (1950-51 to 1961-62)

Since the estimate of domestic saving was a key input in projections of various macro aggregates, there were a number of alternative estimates of saving in the initial years of planning. Apart from estimates by individuals, there were a number of official bodies like the Planning Commission, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the Central Statistical Organisation (CSO) and the National Council of Applied Economic Research (NCAER) which generated saving estimates for the Indian economy.

Planning Commission's Estimates

The genesis of estimation of financial saving in independent India dates back to the rudimentary estimates made by the Planning Commission in the First Five-Year Plan Document. In its effort towards a national budgeting exercise in 1952, the financial saving was estimated for the private sector for 1950-51 in currency and bank deposits, provident funds, small savings, insurance, and deposits & share capital of co-operative banks. Although the Planning Commission regarded financial saving estimates to be relatively more reliable than physical saving of the private sector, there were notably a number of shortcomings. First, financial saving was estimated for the private sector as a whole and not for the household sector alone. Secondly, the coverage was too limited to gather data for the entire range of financial assets. Thirdly, the Planning Commission admitted to the possibility of double counting, which was adjusted from the aggregate saving estimates to match with the overall investment estimates. Finally, the estimates of household financial saving in insurance and co-operatives related to the year 1949-50 while those for the rest of the instruments related to the year 1950-51.

Private Attempts

In one of the initial private attempts (Avadhani, et.al., 1960), household financial saving was estimated for the period 1949-50 to 1954-55 across three categories of financial assets, viz., liquid assets (currency, deposits and gold), contractual saving (insurance and provident fund contributions) and other financial assets (government securities and other savings transferred to government, and industrial shares and securities). There were some improvements: a separate estimate was arrived for financial saving for the household sector, the coverage was widened, the estimates of household financial saving were generated in a time series and the methodology of estimation was refined. Gold was also included as one of the instruments of financial saving. The private hoards of gold were considered to be part of country's potential reserves and therefore considered as foreign investment. However, some shortcomings still remained. First, the cash holdings of non-banking corporations were assumed to remain constant and currency with households was estimated to equal the changes of currency in circulation, after adjusting for currency with banks and treasuries.

Secondly, in respect of provident funds (PF), figures for only government employees were taken and no attempt was made to estimate the PF contributions in the private sector. Thirdly, in the calculation of household sector's investment in shares and debentures, the data of bonus issues sanctioned were taken in the absence of information on actual issues. Besides this fundamental estimation exercise on saving, there were some review studies by individual scholars (See Bhatt, 1959 and Raj, 1962).

Three Major Institutional Attempts

Estimates of National Council of Applied Economic Research (NCAER)

NCAER began estimation of household saving by following both institutional (NCAER, 1961, 1965 and 1966) and survey approaches (NCAER, 1962). The institutional approach provided a time series for the period 1948-49 to 1961-62, and the results were verified from the surveys. On the other hand, surveys were aimed at capturing the behavioural and motivational aspects of rural and urban areas.

A number of refinements were made as compared with the earlier attempts. A detailed coverage was made to capture information on both the assets and liabilities of the households across the various financial instruments, viz., currency, deposits, shares and debentures, claims on government, life funds and provident & pension funds and gold and silver. Standard sources and procedures were organised for compilation purposes. The residual system of estimation was adopted for computing holdings of currency, corporate securities and claims on government. As the estimates of non-household sectors' holdings under the various instruments became more refined the saving estimates for the households in these instruments, arrived residually, became more accurate. Besides obtaining data from other sources, notably the RBI (especially for the banking sector, local authorities and for the government) the Council developed its own data base of domestic non-government companies on the basis of sample information available with them. The calculation of commercial bank deposits and commercial bank advances pertaining to the households was refined by blowing up the data pertaining to households in the RBI's survey on ownership of deposits with scheduled commercial banks and in the RBI's survey on outstanding credit of scheduled commercial banks, respectively, on the basis of coverage of aggregate deposits and aggregate credit in these surveys. The coverage of provident funds was improved to include estimates for industrial workers and employees of the government, educational and financial institutions, and employees under Coal Mines' provident fund scheme. Coverage was also made for all the pension funds. Availability of the RBI's surveys on government securities since 1957 improved the household saving estimates in this instrument. The data on household investment in the local authorities were also included.

Some areas of weakness still remained. In the residual derivation of household investment in corporate securities no deductions could be made for the subscription of these securities by the Central and State Government departments. On the other side of the households' financial account, the estimates of liabilities of the household sector to the non-government companies were ad hoc.

Estimates of Reserve Bank of India (RBI)

The RBI was the first official agency to systematically estimate the domestic saving of the Indian economy, covering the period 1950-51 to 1957-58 (RBI, 1960). The financial assets were bifurcated into two categories, viz., (i) liquid assets (currency, net bank deposits and gold), and (ii) other financial assets (shares, securities and insurance policies). The refinements made in the subsequently released saving estimates RBI (1961, 1965) have been presented in Annexure I.

While the 1960 and the 1961 series had several limitations, the estimates in the 1965 series became more complete as a result of some refinements in methodology. The estimates of currency and shares and debentures held by households were derived residually after deductions of the holdings of the non-household sectors from the aggregate holdings in these instruments. Therefore, the accuracy was contingent on the correctness of the estimates of aggregate estimates as well as those for the non-household sectors. The estimates of holdings of households in the above mentioned instruments improved as the RBI's data base of sample companies of private corporate business became complete with data pertaining to small public limited companies becoming available from the 1961 series. Furthermore, the increased coverage of the estimates of currency with public to include variations in small coins in the 1961 series made the figures of currency held by the households more accurate. In the case of shares and debentures, in the 1960 series, the data on total consents by the private corporate business were taken as a proxy for the actual issues. However, from the 1961 series onwards, the estimates of aggregate issues were based on the actual issues.

The procedure of estimation of household saving in commercial bank deposits was refined over the years. For instance, while in the 1960 series, the coverage of household saving in commercial bank deposits was incomplete in the sense that the RBI's survey data of commercial bank deposits across the designated household categories were taken to represent for the whole household sector, in the 1961 series and 1965 series, the coverage became more comprehensive as the proportion of household holdings in the total surveyed deposits were applied to the census of aggregate commercial bank deposits available with the RBI (as on end-December in the 1961 series and as on the last Friday of March in the 1965 series) to estimate household commercial bank deposits. In the case of estimating advances by commercial banks to household sector, in the 1960 and 1961 series, the advances to 'personal and professional services' and those to 'non-corporate sector' were added and, thus, there was some double counting to the extent that the advances under the former category included advances under the latter category. Thus, the estimate of net deposits (arrived after deduction of advances from commercial banks) was an underestimate. However, as the coverage of the survey became more precise and survey data became more recent, in the 1965 series, the estimates of commercial bank advances to the household sector became more sound. Gold and silver were included as part of the household sector's financial portfolio in the first two series but excluded in the 1965 series in which precious metals were treated as consumer durables.

Estimates of household investments in government securities improved in the 1965 series as, unlike the procedure of using initial cash subscriptions in the first two series, the results of the ownership survey of government securities were used. Moreover, household investments in other government securities started being included. As far as liabilities of households to the government are concerned state government loans received only from some State governments could be covered for the period up to 1955-56, for the subsequent years, all the states could be considered.

The estimates of household sector's saving in provident funds improved in the 1961 series as the data bases of wages and salaries became available separately for all the categories of public limited companies; for private limited companies, households' saving in provident funds were estimated afresh. The data on provident fund contributions of employers also became available separately not only for the sample of all categories of public limited and private limited companies but also for government companies. In the 1965 series, the coverage improved to include provident funds of employees of statutory corporations and branches of foreign concerns.

Finally, expansion of coverage in the 1965 series to include data on postal insurance and life annuity funds considerably improved the estimates of household financial saving in the form of insurance.

The RBI started publishing annual estimates of financial saving of the household sector regularly in its Report on Currency and Finance from the year 1964-65 onwards. The estimates were disaggregated by type of financial instruments. Since the commencement of publication of Flow of Funds accounts in March 1967, the RBI has been publishing at intervals the compilation procedure of the Flow of Funds accounts and refinements being made in them. These captured, inter alia, the refinements made in the compilation of financial accounts of the household sector.

Estimates of Central Statistical Organisation (CSO)

The CSO followed the investment approach in its maiden attempt to estimate saving (CSO, 1962). Gross domestic saving was estimated by deducting net foreign capital inflow from the estimates of gross domestic capital formation. Household saving was derived as a residual by deducting saving of the government and private corporate sectors from the gross domestic saving. Subsequently the CSO prepared the first 'official' set of estimates of saving for the period 1960-61 to 1965-66 and also published the methodology of estimation of saving which was consistent with the methodology of capital formation and national income (CSO, 1969). The financial flow approach adopted towards instrument-wise compilation of financial saving of the household sector was more or less similar to that followed by the RBI. However, unlike the RBI, the CSO included households' deposits of the non-banking sector in its coverage of deposits. The main data source for non-banking companies for the period after 1962 was the RBI's surveys on Growth of Deposits with Non-banking companies. The RBI's survey on non-banking deposits was not available for the period prior to 1962. The average ratio of households' non-banking deposits (as available from the non-banking survey) to 'other borrowings' of public limited companies (obtained from the RBI sample studies on these companies) for the period 1962 to 1965 was worked out. This average ratio was applied to the data on 'other borrowings' for the years prior to 1962 to derive the estimates for household deposits in the non-banking companies.

Comparison of the Institutional Estimates

The profile of the instrument-wise estimates of household financial saving of the three organisations, viz., CSO, RBI and NCAER shows sizeable divergences between the estimates of the three organisations as well as no uniformity in direction in them (Table 1). The differences were particularly prominent in net deposits, net claims on government and in shares and debentures. These divergences basically reflected differences in coverage, sources of data and methodologies of compilation in some of the instruments of the respective organisations. While the NCAER included precious metals as part of household financial financial saving, the RBI (since the 1965 series) and the CSO considered holding of these assets as durable consumption and did not include them in the financial saving portfolio. In the case of deposits, the CSO also included the deposits with non-banking companies, while the RBI and the NCAER restricted their coverage only to commercial and co-operative banks. Furthermore, the RBI covered households' investment in debentures of Land Mortgage Banks under 'net claims on government', whereas the CSO included this item under 'shares and debentures'. Although, the households' share of currency holdings was estimated residually, the estimates varied reflecting the differences in the calculations of the non-household sectors. In the estimation of household saving in shares and debentures, while the derivation was on a residual basis after deductions of non-household subscriptions from the total, the estimates still differed due to varied sources. While the CSO and the NCAER directly culled out aggregate data from the records of the Company Law Board, the RBI obtained this data from Controller of Capital Issues (CCI). Similarly, in estimation of household saving in government securities while the CSO used balance sheets for the data on investments by Life Insurance Corporation and co-operatives for deducting their subscriptions from the total, the RBI relied on its surveys for such data.

Table 1 : Household Financial Saving (1950-51 to 1961-62) : Different Estimates

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

(Rs. crore) 


Item / Financial Year (19')


50-51


51-52


52-53


53-54


54-55


55-56


56-57


57-58


58-59


59-60


60-61


  61-62


(1)


(2)


(3)


(4)


(5)


(6)


(7)


(8)


(9)


(10)


(11)


(12)


(13)


Financial Saving: CSO

62

14

72

142

282

429

333

291

362

433

456

489

Currency

81

-116

-17

26

67

203

48

50

111

133

145

94

Net Deposits

-26

-45

43

21

38

24

-19

76

42

68

11

103

Shares & Debentures

52

49

23

27

11

41

71

36

34

61

67

112

Net Claims on Govt

-84

93

-22

-2

91

76

141

19

71

39

57

-12

Life funds

20

13

18

25

28

31

30

29

32

46

50

65

PF & Pension funds


19


20


27


45


47


54


62


81


72


86


126


127


                         

Financial Saving: RBI

17

-20

45

84

307

389

352

355

378

430

369

521

Currency

80

-115

-22

25

85

190

52

55

121

132

147

99

Net Deposits

-38

-45

28

-8

32

0

37

123

63

82

-124

182

Shares & Debentures

33

23

13

24

38

51

54

50

26

55

125

70

Net Claims on Govt

-96

87

-15

-21

41

65

121

37

68

37

54

-5

Life funds

19

12

18

22

24

33

27

18

32

45

58

61

PF & Pension funds


19


18


23


42


87


50


61


72


68


79


109


114


                         

Financial Saving : NCAER

167

-9

118

162

223

380

279

331

431

423

654

457

Currency

71

-115

-19

26

68

194

47

37

115

138

126

89

Net Deposits

-13

-45

21

-2

11

9

-13

38

75

34

107

-7

Shares & Debentures

31

46

30

22

29

30

75

76

51

56

123

113

Net Claims on Govt

14

25

24

35

33

53

57

44

59

32

94

47

Life funds

15

12

18

23

25

28

26

33

40

49

57

69

PF & Pension funds

29

33

26

45

46

53

64

71

56

79

112

111

Gold & Silver


20


35


18


13


11


13


23


32


35


35


35


35


Sources : (1) CSO, 1989, (2) Report on Currency and Finance, 1970-71, RBI, (3) RBI, 1978 and (4) NCAER, 1965.

Note : In the cases of the CSO and the NCAER, the estimates of household financial saving (net) are directly available (CSO, 1989 and NCAER, 1965). For the RBI, while estimates of financial saving (net) are directly available for the period 1950-51 to 1955-56 the same had to be derived from the gross series of household sector's financial account for the subsequent period, which are available in the above mentioned reports of the RBI.

Section 4

The Second Phase (1962-63 to 1987-88)

In 1966 the NCAER discontinued its institutional approach to estimation of saving and focused on undertaking surveys to obtain estimates of saving and investment of the household sector. Since 1975 the Planning Commission started publishing estimates that have been consistent with those released by the CSO. The RBI and the CSO persevered with systematic time series of household sector's financial saving (Table 2). This system of two sets of estimates for financial saving continued till the adoption of the recommendations of the Raj Committee. There were a few changes in the methodology of compilation of financial saving. Furthermore, the average rate of divergence in the RBI's estimate of financial saving from the CSO's etimate narrowed considerably during 1962-80 from the average rate during 1950-62. The RBI started including non-banking deposits in the portfolio of the household financial saving since the 1960s. On the other hand, although methodology of compilation of household financial saving converged the two organisations could not retrospectively revise their data for the earlier period to narrow the differences.

In 1980, the CSO released a more comprehensive methodology of saving in which, inter alia, the instrument-wise compilation of household sector's financial saving was elaborated (CSO, 1980). Financial saving of the household sector was estimated in net terms across the various instruments by netting out the financial liabilities at the instrument level. Although "currency with households" continued to be derived residually, there were some refinements. First, in the cases of co-operative societies since 1973-74 and general insurance companies since their nationalisation separate estimates of their currency holdings were available. Secondly, the currency holdings with private corporate business were estimated by using the RBI's studies of finances of sample companies, which provided detailed information on private limited companies segregated under 'medium and large companies' and 'small companies'. Thirdly, deductions were also made for currency held with railways using data from the records of the Railway Board. The estimation of household sector's commercial bank deposits improved with the application of the RBI's survey on ownership of deposits with scheduled commercial banks through Basic Statistical Returns (BSR) which provided more accurate picture of the household sector's share in total as compared to the use of earlier surveys not based on BSR. Household sector's investment in shares and debentures of non-government joint stock companies was derived as a residual after deducting from the estimate of total paid-up capital (exclusive of bonus) and the debentures, the subscriptions by non-household sectors (viz., central and state governments, local authorities, statutory corporation, LIC and general insurance companies, banks and foreigners) as well as intra-sectoral investment in the form of industrial securities and shares of subsidiary companies. Household saving in life insurance funds comprised saving through Life Insurance Corporation (LIC), postal life insurance and state government life insurance. Household saving in LIC was computed as excess of 'income' (excluding capital gains and old claims) over 'outgo' and the government's share in profits. The saving was netted out with loans and advances to households against mortgage of property. Saving in the postal life insurance and State government life insurance was estimated as excess of receipts over payments. The sources were the annual reports of P&T and the state government budgets. The employees' saving in provident fund included two more categories, viz., funds collected under public provident fund scheme and dock labour provident fund scheme on top of those already covered in the earlier methodology of 1969. Since 1971-72 Employees Family Pension Scheme, 1971 were also included. The procedure of compilation for rest of the categories under this instrument remained the same.

Table 2 : Household Financial Saving (1962-63 to 1979-80) : Different Estimates

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

(Rs. crore) 


Item / Financial Year (19')


62-63


63-64


64-65


65-66


66-67


67-68


68-69


69-70


70-71


71-72


72-73


73-74


74-75


75-76


76-77


77-78


  78-79


  79-80


(1)


(2)


(3)


(4)


(5)


(6)


(7)


(8)


(9)


(10)


(11)


(12)


(13)


(14)


(15)


(16)


(17)


(18)


(19)


Financial Saving: CSO

499

743

714

1072

864

865

795

919

1371

1555

2128

3612

2374

3918

4852

5853

6658

6081

                                     

Currency

175

211

135

285

118

145

263

334

345

381

616

812

17

321

1130

705

1482

1338

                                     

Net Deposits

70

118

253

309

337

268

72

85

265

574

773

1260

1017

1131

1902

2780

2742

1650

                                     

Shares & Debentures

45

119

64

175

114

78

84

65

94

61

26

44

137

115

87

325

175

214

                                     

Net Claims on Govt

-20

42

-32

-9

-48

-59

-84

-139

-12

-243

-196

434

-95

742

95

180

31

465

                                     

Life funds

82

78

88

96

104

122

139

160

189

216

262

326

322

385

480

559

648

739

                                     

PF & Pension funds

147

175

206

216

239

311

321

414

490

566

647

736

976

1224

1158

1304

1580

1675

                                     

Financial Saving: RBI

512

751

662

838

770

843

788

835

1487

1622

2368

2801

2602

3816

5195

5444

6942

6797

                                     

Currency

174

217

135

287

126

161

271

336

355

404

637

769

18

342

1140

703

1525

1398

                                     

Net Deposits

64

134

197

247

296

241

-4

5

407

644

882

1041

1318

1181

1917

2445

2840

2438

                                     

Shares & Debentures

25

113

26

24

23

42

41

47

81

32

46

8

60

59

15

235

322

267

                                     

Net Claims on Govt

31

51

37

8

-5

8

50

-68

42

-130

18

69

154

812

514

230

61

149

                                     

Life funds

89

81

85

74

120

122

157

157

180

198

262

311

265

342

437

515

601

670

                                     

PF & Pension funds


129


155


182


198


210


269


273


358


422


474


523


603


787


1080


1172


1316


1593


1875


Sources : (1) CSO, 1989, (2) RBI, 1978, (3) Report of the Working Group on Savings (Raj Committee), RBI, 1982; (4)Report on Currency and Finance, RBI, various issues.

Comparison between the estimates of the CSO and the RBI

There were efforts between the RBI and CSO to harmonise the concepts, methodology and sources adopted for compilation of savings. However, the differences in their estimates persisted (Table 3). The RBI estimated the households' non-banking deposits with non-financial companies from its sample studies of joint-stock company studies and those with financial companies from its survey of non-banking companies. On the other hand, the CSO, relied on one source, i.e., the survey of non-banking companies for estimating these deposits in both financial as well as non-financial companies. Secondly, for the households' holdings in the life funds of LIC, the RBI used the balance sheet data of LIC, while the CSO relied upon the biennial valuation accounts of LIC with adjustments for capital gains. Thirdly, the RBI estimated of household sector's investment in government securities on the basis of its surveys of ownership of government debt. On the other hand, the CSO computed this by the residual approach. On the liability side, in case of borrowings of the households from the Central and State governments, the CSO included a larger number of budgetary items as compared with the RBI's compilation. Finally, in the case of the households' investment in shares and debentures of joint stock companies, the RBI continued to rely upon the quarterly returns of the Controller of Capital Issues (CCI). The CSO obtained data from the Department of Company Affairs (DCA) and CCI for the estimation of aggregate issues of shares and debentures for the corporate sector.

Table 3: Household Financial Saving (1980-81 to 1987-88) : Different Estimates

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

(Rs. crore) 


Item/Financial Year (19')


80-81


81-82


82-83


83-84


84-85


85-86


86-87


87-88


(1)


(2)


(3)


(4)


(5)


(6)


(7)


(8)


(9)


Financial Saving: CSO

8610

9614

12739

13294

17879

18538

23336

26820

Currency

1625

955

2026

2776

2854

2220

3090

4815

Net Deposits

2985

3022

4623

3684

5646

5295

7805

7684

Shares & Debentures

443

513

867

720

1320

1980

2711

2009

Net Claims on Govt

576

1656

1211

1777

2920

3223

2670

3350

Life funds

859

982

1149

1283

1453

1676

2005

2453

PF & Pension funds


2122


2486


2863


3054


3686


4144


5055


6509


Financial Saving: RBI

8610

9588

12566

13552

17816

18579

23339

26819

Currency

1625

965

2026

2776

2938

2220

3090

4815

Net Deposits

3126

3090

4911

4258

5744

5850

8189

8119

Shares & Debentures

443

624

768

777

1329

1980

2711

2009

Net Claims on Govt

561

1636

1110

1773

2910

3208

2657

3333

Life funds

733

793

886

916

1136

1133

1637

2034

PF & Pension funds


2122


2480


2865


3052


3759


4188


5055


6509


Sources: (1) National Accounts Statistics, CSO, Various Issues, and

(2) Report on Currency and Finance, RBI, Various Issues.

Section 5

The Third Stage: Unifying Methodology (1988-89 till date)

Rates of saving and investment increased significantly in the late 1970s. However, commensurate acceleration in the overall growth rate of the economy did not occur in this "high saving phase". In this milieu, the Working Group on Savings (Chairman: Professor: K.N. Raj) (RBI, 1982) was appointed to, inter alia, critically evaluate the estimates of saving and investment for the Indian economy and recommend improvements in the methods of estimation. The Raj Committee was of the view that the estimates generated in India in 1960s and 1970s were internationally comparable. It suggested further strengthening of efforts by both RBI and CSO to bring about uniformity in concepts, methodology and data sources for saving estimation. As far as the estimates for households' deposits with non-banking companies are concerned, the Committee recommended the supply of the estimates by the RBI to the CSO. For the household sector's investment in government securities, the Committee suggested that the RBI's methodology of using the survey results was more appropriate than the CSO's residual approach as the latter was prone to inaccuracy resulting from differences of valuation, accounting period, etc. across the various institutions. For removing the substantial differences in households' investment in shares and debentures, the Raj Committee recommended that the CSO's expert committee could construct an annual series for paid-up capital. The Committee suggested that the RBI's survey of ownership of corporate securities needs to be revived for deriving the household sector's share in the investments in shares and debentures. The Committee recommended that the RBI and the CSO sort out the remaining differences pertaining to the saving in the form of life fund of LIC and borrowings of households from the government through mutual deliberations. On the presentation aspect the Committee suggested that the RBI's presentation of financial account of the sector showing the financial assets and liabilities separately was preferable to the CSO's convention of presenting only net increases in financial assets as in the form provided a better understanding of the scale of financial intermediation and the growth of saving associated with it. The need for undertaking company finance studies through regular quinquennial censuses covering companies of all sizes more regularly and for finding appropriate blowing-up factors was recommended. As this would, inter alia, refine the estimates for private corporate sector it would ipso facto remove the biases in household saving for particularly for the instruments in which residual approach is adopted (like currency, shares and debentures, etc.). Expeditious surveys pertaining to ownership of bank deposits and those relating to growth of deposits of non-banking companies were also advised. Furthermore, it was recommended that the bank deposit survey needed to provide more detailed and meaningful break-up of unclassified category of individuals. The non-bank deposit survey was also sought to improve its coverage. The deposits of fully Government-owned public sector companies and security deposits of the households with various improvement trusts, housing boards and electricity boards had to be captured in the financial saving. Furthermore, it was recommended that the inherent inflation in household financial saving, as provident funds of non-government educational institutions are considered without including the loans and advances of these institutions to their employees, needs to be removed. The estimation of these loans and advances to households were recommended to be done on the basis of the deposit and loan pattern of government institutions. As the provident funds of the employees of some private institutions are also kept in the post offices as small savings, it was cautioned that any duplication on this account had to be removed. Duplication also had to be avoided by not including bonus shares in the compilation of investment in shares and debentures. As far as the data base pertaining to local authorities were concerned, the Committee indicated that the State Statistical Bureaus had to compile statistics of local authorities on a complete enumeration basis, and so the liabilities of the household sector to local authorities could also be accounted for. The lag pertaining to information of loans received by households from the primary credit and non-credit co-operative societies also needed to be reduced. The RBI surveys of ownership of shares and debentures of the private corporate sector and ownership of Government debt needed to be revived.

The CSO and the RBI agreed to adopt a uniform methodology and data base as well as to a division of labour in the estimation of savings. Regarding financial saving of the household sector, the CSO undertook the preparation of the estimates for life funds, provident and pension funds and supplying the same to RBI, while the RBI agreed to compile estimates for rest of the financial instruments and to provide the same to the CSO. This division of labour between RBI and the CSO has been insuring that each agency is compiling that set on which it has comparative advantage, as had been notified by the Raj Committee. Now some differences, which persist, essentially reflect just the time differences in the release of the estimates by the two organisations when they update their respective portions of the data base.

The annual publication of the CSO introduced both the asset-wise and liability-wise details of the whole financial account of the household sector. The financial assets for each category of assets were presented in gross terms and financial liabilities to the various sectors were also shown before finally deducting the latter from the former to estimate the financial saving. Refinements in the methodology were also effected. As per the suggestion of the Advisory Committee in National Accounts in 1987, based on sectoral holding pattern, 93 per cent of the currency with public was apportioned to the household sector. It was, however, suggested that this ratio of currency for the household sector would be subject to revision with availability recent survey data of the RBI. The RBI started releasing the survey of ownership of deposits for estimation of commercial bank deposits every year. The coverage of the financial account of the households increased to include estimates of security deposits of the households in the State Electricity Boards (SEBs) on the assets side and the loans and advances by the SEBs to their employees on the liabilities side. In the case of households' investment in shares and debentures, due care was taken to exclude blown-up estimate of bonus shares from the aggregate of global paid-up capital (PUC) of the joint-stock companies and blown up data of debentures. The household sector's investment in this instrument was being derived residually by deducting from the aggregate of shares and debentures, the subscriptions contributed by the individual sectors, as available from the flow of funds accounts. The surveys relating to ownership of government debt and pertaining to shares and debentures were revived. In the case of provident funds from employees of non-government educational institutions, since 1981-82, no separate estimates were shown as PF under this category is included under Employees' PF scheme, 1952.

Besides the impetus provided by Raj Committee's recommendations, further refinements have been effected in the estimation process. The estimates of household investments in Unit Trust of India (UTI) are now being derived on the basis of both its Annual Report and special status-cum-scheme wise break-up of sales and repurchases of units, providing the current holding ratio of the households. Furthermore, the coverage has also been improved to include households' investment in all the other mutual funds. Secondly, in order to correct the unavoidable time lag in the availability of surveys on company finances the current data on new issues of non-government public limited companies are used in conjunction with data of DCA and ownership survey of securities of private corporate business to derive household sector's investment in shares and debentures. Thirdly, similarly, in case of data pertaining to the co-operative sector advance data from summary publications are utilised.

Section 6

Further Developments

The methodology for estimating saving in India has attracted considerable attention during the last two decades, both as episode specific and as critiques of Raj Committee Report. Rakshit (1982, 1983) pointed out an important source of overestimation in household financial saving. Since unlike the saving of the public or the private corporate sector, financial saving is compiled as the change in stock numbers of financial assets (net of financial liabilities) between two end-points, any year-end bulge is going to affect the relevant estimates. Rakshit (1982) termed this as 'bunching effect' due to the bunching of foodgrains, cotton, raw jute, oil seeds, sugar cane or tobacco leaves by traders and/or manufacturers in the organised sector, and to the bunching of payment in February/March by a large number of government and semi-government organisation (Rakshit 1983). While the outstanding number of the financial asset/liabilities could be subject to the influence of bunching, its extent in the flow number would definitely be relatively small. Nevertheless, the ideal way to get rid of the 'bunching effect' totally could be to work out the saving in currency and deposits on the basis of outstanding numbers on yearly average basis.

Against the backdrop of economic reforms and recommendations of System of National Accounts, United Nations, 1993 (1993 UNSNA), an Expert Group on Saving and Capital Formation (Chairman: Prof. Raja J. Chelliah) (Government of India, 1996) submitted its report in December 1996. It recommended a number of measures to streamline data on household financial savings. They include reduction in the time lag associated with the availability of flow of funds data and improvements in coverage to include the household sector's deposits in institutions like Housing Boards, Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Limited, etc., consumer credit from the non-banking financial companies, credit extended by the non-financial joint stock companies to their employees and all new financial instruments like deep discount bonds, zero coupon bonds etc., including derivatives like warrants, which are traded apart from their underlying securities to which they are linked. It also recommended spreading of accrued interest of the full tenure on deep discount and zero coupon bonds on a yearly basis and inclusion of the same in household financial saving on an annual basis. As a procedural refinement, the Committee advised that currency apportionment to the household sector should be basically on the basis of detailed flow of funds accounts.

In February 1999, the CSO upgraded its methodology and released its new series of national accounts statistics and advanced the base year from 1980-81 to 1993-94. In the area of household sector financial saving the coverage has been improved to include Pension Fund of Dock Labour Boards and Port Trusts.

Section 7

Future Directions

The compilation of household sector's financial saving has come a long way in India. However, considerable refinements need to be made in the existing estimates. The core strategy would be to progressively reduce the time lag in the compilation of flow of funds accounts of the Indian economy so as to make it contemporaneous with estimation of household financial saving and with national income aggregates. Furthermore, the data base of the non-household sectors needs to be refined to tone up the estimates with respect to the household sector on the lines suggested by the Raj Committee and Chelliah Committee.

With the onset of financial liberalisation, there is a need for the compilers to be prepared to increase the coverage of financial asset and financial liability vectors of the household sector to include new financial instruments. For instance, investments in zero coupon bonds and other deep discount bonds as well as the imputed interest accrued on these during their terms have to be incorporated. Similarly, the participation of the household sector, if any, in the auctions of the treasury bills also need to be accounted for. Financial derivatives have added a new dimension to the estimation of household financial saving as the figures under warrants have to be constantly adjusted in the shares of private corporate business depending on the options exercised by the holders.

Progress is also due towards disaggregation of financial saving of the heterogeneous household sector across its different constituent sub-sectors on the lines suggested by the Raj Committee as this would facilitate the analysis of the behaviour of the households proper vis-a-vis the other components.

There is a need to examine the feasibility of presenting the estimates of household financial saving in real terms by the most acceptable method, albeit as a memorandum item. Saving, being value aggregate, is always presented in current prices and is not deflated by compilers. Unless, one uses the investment deflator, there arises a case ex-post inequality between real saving and real investment. However, in case of household financial saving, instead of investment deflator the household consumption expenditure deflator may be more appropriate (Shetty, 1990). In the absence of the data on household consumption expenditure in the Indian national accounts, private final consumption expenditure could be used to deflate the series and this can appear as a memorandum item.

Finally, there is also a need to integrate the entire sequence of accounts in the national accounting system (United Nations, 1993), as then it would be possible to derive the estimate of household financial saving by the income approach and check the estimate as arrived by the conventional balance sheet approach.

References

Avadhani, K.V.R., A.K. Ghosh, R.M. Honavar and M.L. Trikha (1960): "Savings of the Indian Union, 1949-50 to 1954-55", in V.K.R.V Rao, S.R. Sen, M.V. Divatia and Uma Datta (eds.): Indian Conference on Research in National Income and Allied Topics Vol. I.

Bhatt, V.V. (1959): "Savings and Capital Formation", Economic Development and Cultural Change, Vol. 7 (April).

Central Statistical Organisation (1962): "Financing of Gross Capital Formation in India for 1948-49 to 1959-60" (mimeo).

---- (1969): National Income Statistics: Estimates of Saving in India, 1960-61 to 1965-66.

---- (1980): National Accounts Statistics: Sources and Methods.

---- (1989): National Accounts Statistics: Sources and Methods.

Central Statistical Organisation (1999): New Series on National Accounts Statistics (Base Year 1993-94), May.

Government of India (1996): "Capital Formation and Saving in India", Report of the Expert Group on Savings and Capital formation (Chairman: Prof. Raja. J. Chelliah).

National Council of Applied Economic Research (1961): Saving in India: A Monograph.

---- (1962): Urban Indian Saving.

---- (1965): Saving in India: 1950-51 to 1961-62.

---- (1966): Saving in India during the Plan Periods.

Planning Commission (1951): The First Five Year Plan, Government of India.

Raj, K.N. (1962): The Marginal Rate of Saving in the Indian Economy, Oxford Economic Papers, 14(1): February.

Rao, T. Rama (1988): "Estimates of Saving in India-A Review", The Journal of Income and Wealth, January.

Reserve Bank of India (1960): "Estimates of Saving in the Indian Economy", Reserve Bank of India Bulletin, Vol. XIV (March).

---- (1961): "Estimates of Saving and Investment in the Indian Economy 1950-51 to 1958", Reserve Bank of India Bulletin, Vol. XV (August).

---- (1965): "Estimates of Saving and Investment in the Indian Economy 1950-51 to 1962-63", Reserve Bank of India Bulletin, Vol. XIX (March).

---- (1978): Chart Book of Financial and Economic Indicators.

---- (1982): "Capital Formation and Saving in India", Report of the Working Group on Savings (Chairman: Prof. K.N. Raj), February.

----: Report on Currency and Finance, various issues.

Rudra, Ashok (1972): "Savings, Investment and Consumption" in C. R. Rao (ed.): Data Base of Indian Economy: Review and Reappraisal (Volume 1), Calcutta: Statistical Publishing Society.

Shetty, S.L. (1990): "Overall Aspects of Savings: Measurement of Savings in Real terms", in Datta Roy Choudhary and Bagchi (eds.), Domestic Savings in India, Vikas Publishing House.

United Nations (1993): System of National Accounts 1993, Washington D.C.

Annexure I

Evolution in the RBI's Compilation Procedure in the Pre-Seventies


F i n a n c i a l

First Series,

Second Series,

Third Series,

Assets

March 1960

August 1961

March 1965

(net)


(1950/51 to 1957/58)


(1950/51 to 1958/59)


(1950/51 to 1962/63)


(1)


(2)


(3)


(4)


1. Currency

Calculated as a re-

Currency estimates for

No change in proce-

 

sidual (currency with

households underwent

dure was effected.

 

public minus currency

refinements, as varia-

 
 

held by non-financial

tions in small coins

 
 

corporates, local au-

also were included and

 
 

thorities, government

data of currency with

 
 

companies, financial,

non-financial companies

 
 

insurance and co-op-

were revised due to

 
 

erative institutions).

availability of data on

 
 

Data of non-financial

small public limited

 
 

companies pertained to

companies.

 
 

medium and large pub-

   
 

lic limited companies

   
 

and private limited

   
 

companies.


 
 

2. Bank

Households' deposits

While earlier the survey

The survey ratios of

Deposits

with commercial and

data on household de-

households' deposits

net of

co-operative banks &

posits were taken di-

were now applied to

Advances

co-operative credit so-

rectly now the survey

the outstanding de-

 

cieties were compiled

ratios were applied to

posits as at last Fri-

 

directly from the RBI

actual year end totals.

day of March instead

 

surveys on deposits

The procedure for ad-

of as at end-Decem-

 

with commercial banks

vances was also similar,

ber. Bank advances

 

and its publications on

i.e., by applying survey

to households were

 

co-operative move-

ratios to the year end

compiled on the basis

 

ment, respectively. But

totals.

of more updated sur-

 

the RBI survey used

 

veys. Deposits of in-

 

for computing com-

 

dividuals with co-op-

 

mercial bank advances

 

erative non-credit so-

 

to households led to

 

cieties now began to

 

unavoidable double-

 

be included.

 

counting imparting

   
 

downward bias to esti-

   
 

mate of households'

   
 

net deposits.


 
 

3. Gold

Value of annual gold

As government ac-

Excluded gold and

and

production plus smug-

quired gold production

silver from household

Silver

gled gold

from 1958, this was not

saving as they were

   

included in household

treated as consumer

   

saving. Silver produc-

durables.

 
 

tion was included.


 

4. Insurance

Increase in life funds

No change in procedure

Data on postal insur-

 

from insurance minus

was effected.

ance and life annuity

 

loans and advances to

 

funds were also in-

 

policy holders


 

cluded.


5. Provident

Included PF of RBI,

With data on small

PF of employees of

Funds

Central and State

public limited compa-

branches of foreign

 

governments sched-

nies and data on em-

concerns, government

 

uled and A2 class non-  

ployers' contributions

companies and statu-

 

scheduled banks and

for all categories of

tory corporations

 

insurance companies.

limited companies

were included.

   

available, estimates

 
 
 

were refined.


 

6. Net Claims

Households' Initial

No change in procedure

Households' invest-

on Govern-

subscriptions to Central

was effected.

ment in approved se-

ment

and State government

 

curities of state elec-

 

loans plus small sav-

 

tricity boards, trans-

 

ings plus investment in

 

port corporations, fi-

 

local authorities' secu-

 

nancial corporations,

 

rities net of advances

 

etc., were calculated

 

by government to

 

as a residual.

 

households


 
 

7. Shares

Residually derived af-

As consents were valid

Refinements were

And

ter deducting from the

for two years, the

made by using aver-

Securities

total issues, subscrip-

changes in paid-up

age of annual ratios

 

tions by government

capital till 1957 were

of capital (issues) ac-

 

and corporate sector.

adjusted to equal to

tually raised during

 

Till 1957 as data on

half the change in paid-

1957-61 period to

 

actual issues were not

up capital (PUC) of the

consents in the corre-

 

available, data on con-

current year and half

sponding years. Fur-

 

sents were taken.

the change of PUC of

ther, refinements

   

the preceding year.

were made regarding

   

Households' investment

estimates of subscrip-

   

in shares of co-opera-

tions by non-resi-

   

tives started being in-

dents, government

 
 

cluded.


and banks.




*


Dhritidyuti Bose and Partha Ray are Assistant Advisers in the Department of Economic Analysis and Policy of the Reserve Bank of India. The views expressed in this paper are authors' personal views.

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