India needs to improve its financial system supervision and crisis preparedness while at the same time liberalising some sectors to reduce distortions and risks created by heavy state involvement in banking, the International Monetary Fund said on Tuesday.
The IMF's Financial System Stability Assessment Update said India had improved its supervision and regulations in the 20 years since it started liberalising its economy and that its financial system fared well in the global financial crisis.
"Despite these recent successes, India's financial sector still confronts longstanding impediments to its ability to support growth as well as new challenges to stability," said the 116-page study.
These challenges were mostly medium- to longer-term, while stress tests of banks and other indicators showed that the financial system vulnerabilities were manageable in the near term, it said.
But the large role of the state -- which owns big financial institutions, directs credit to priority sectors, and controls the range of permitted activities and the availability of foreign capital -- "contributes to a build-up of fiscal contingent liabilities and creates a risk of capital misallocation that may constrain economic growth," it said.
The financial sector's capacity to support sustainable economic growth would be boosted by 'gradually reducing mandatory holdings of government securities by financial institutions, and allowing greater access to private -- domestic and foreign --