classical liberal
M. Narasimham
How M. Narasimham is discussed in this archive
Authored 1 work in the archive.
Referenced in 3 other works — including INDIAN BANKING IN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE , EMERGING SCENARIO IN THE CAPITAL MARKET AND SEBI'S ROLE , and Agricultural Investment .
In INDIAN BANKING IN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE : Narasimham is positioned as the lecturer who named the 'unfinished agenda of reform' that frames Reddy's whole argument — and Reddy treats his 1993 lecture as a watershed in the series.
In EMERGING SCENARIO IN THE CAPITAL MARKET AND SEBI'S ROLE : Pandya locates SEBI's whole regulatory architecture in the Narasimham Committee's financial-sector reform blueprint, treating Narasimham's recommendations as the ideational source of the 1992 statutory recognition of SEBI and the repeal of the Capital Issues (Control) Act.
In Agricultural Investment : Rao leans on the Narasimham Committee's banking-reform framework to justify raising the credit-deposit ratio as a route to closing the Rs.
By M. Narasimham (1)
Primary works (1)
Mentioned in (4)
Primary works (4)
- OPENING UP OF THE INSURANCE INDUSTRY – THREE YEARS ON · 2004
- INDIAN BANKING IN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE · 2002
- "M. Narasimham (1993) and S. S. Tarapore." — Narasimham's 1993 Shroff lecture is named in Reddy's chronological sweep
- "the unfinished agenda of reform that Narasimham named." — Narasimham's 'unfinished agenda' is the recurring theme Reddy adopts from him
- EMERGING SCENARIO IN THE CAPITAL MARKET AND SEBI'S ROLE · 1994
- "Locates SEBI's mandate in the Narasimham Committee-inspired financial-sector reforms, with statutory recognition granted in February 1992 alongside the abolition of the Capital Issues (Control) Act and pricing controls." — key-points summary; Narasimham is identified as the conceptual progenitor of SEBI's statutory mandate
- Agricultural Investment · 1993
- "To close it he proposes raising the credit-deposit ratio per the Narasimham Committee, exempting incremental rural deposits from SLR and CRR" — Rao invokes the Narasimham Committee's reform framework as the lever for unlocking institutional credit supply to agriculture