Popular Articles

VRL looking to exit its wind power business
Logistics and transport major VRL Logistics Ltd (VRL) is looking at exiting its 42.5 Mw wind power venture at Mundargi in Gadag district of Karnataka, because of delayed receivables from the sale of power as well as its high operational costs. The Hubli-based company had forayed into the wind energy business in 2007 by setting up the venture for Rs 250 crore.

FMC warns members to avoid trade in inactive accounts
The Forward Markets Commission (FMC), the commodity futures markets regulator, has warned exchange members not to accept trade request from clients whose account witnessed no trade since the past six months.

News of the day

Subir Roy: Coping well with Copenhagen climate
Subir Roy / New Delhi December 23, 2009, 0:14 IST
International Business

Global crisis led to breakdown of trust in fin system: RBI

Reserve Bank Governor D Subbarao today said the ongoing global crisis has resulted in a massive breakdown of trust in the financial system and that the study of economics could lose its value base. - Govt borrowing hindering fiscal transmission: RBI - Govt borrowing impedes interest rate cut: Subbarao - New currency note paper unit to be set up, says RBI - Capital a/c convertibility after weighing pros and cons: RBI - Subbarao says too early to take action on inflation - Deficient rain matter of concern, RBI to act when needed "What the crisis has done is to cause a massive breakdown of trust: trust in the financial system, in bankers, in business, business leaders, investment advisers, credit rating agencies, politicians, media and in globalisation," he said at a conference on "Ethics and the World of Finance" here. Saying that current financial crisis has called into question the ethical foundation of the financial world, the Governor at Sri Sathya Sai University said the crisis has exposed an issue of moral hazard in the banking system. "...Something that has come to be called privatisation of profit and socialisation of costs," he said. The governments can hardly afford to have large institutions fail as they would be bailed out at tax payers expense, he added. The "too big to fail" syndrome enables financial institutions to take risks a soap maker cannot take, he said. The crisis, he said, has triggered a soul searching debate on whether the malaise in the financial sector could be a result of the flaws in the direction that economics, as an academic discipline, has taken over the years. "I have raised the issue of economics, as an academic discipline, losing its value base, and conjectured if that could be at the root of the malaise in the financial sector," he said. Subbarao said the ethical content of economics got eroded over the centuries as economics tried to move from being a value based social science to a value free exact science. "The mathematical abstractions got carried too far and in the process economics lost its link with real life situations that it was expected to study and analyse," he said. Though there is no evidence to show that people in the financial sector are inherently less ethical, given the larger temptation and more opportunities there could be greater incidence of unethical behaviour in the sector, he said. "Banks and financial institutions have a greater responsibility of being conscious of the obligation they have of not jeopardizing the larger public interest," he said. Further, quoting economist John Stuart Mill, he said that "if we make men honest, good and decent, then they will make themselves honest, good and decent engineers, doctors and teachers, and may I add, financial sector professionals."


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):