Money Supply (M3), GDP, Inflation & Velocity – India are closely related to the expansion and monetary policy of the central bank (RBI) of India.
M3 (Money Supply):
– Broadest measure of money in the Indian economy.
– Includes currency with the public + demand deposits + time deposits with banks.
– Indicates total liquidity available for spending and saving.
Velocity of Money (V):
– Measures how many times one unit of currency is used in transactions in a year.
– Formula: V = Nominal GDP / M3
– A high V = active economy; low V = people are saving/holding cash.
Real GDP (Y):
– Total value of goods and services produced, adjusted for inflation.
– Reflects actual economic growth and productivity.
Inflation (P):
– Rate at which prices rise over time, usually measured by the CPI (Consumer Price Index).
– Moderate inflation indicates healthy demand; high inflation erodes purchasing power.
Quantity Theory of Money (Equation):
– MV = PY → Total money spent = Total value of output
– Growth form: ΔM3 = ΔP + ΔY – ΔV
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Long-Term Trends (2004–2024):
Real GDP growth (avg): ~8% per year
Inflation (avg): ~5–6% per year
Velocity of money decline: ~1.5–2% annually
Theoretical M3 growth rate = 8 + 6 – (–2) = 12% to 16%
Actual M3 CAGR (2004–2024): ~8.2%
Interpretation: RBI maintained tighter liquidity than theory suggested, likely to control inflation and support financial stability.
Recent 5-Year Trends (2019–2024):
Real GDP growth: ~6.0%
Inflation: ~5.5%
Velocity decline: –1.0% annually
Theoretical M3 growth: 12.5%
Actual M3 CAGR: 7.33%
Interpretation: Post-COVID, RBI reduced monetary expansion, focusing on inflation control and absorbing excess liquidity.
Interpretations & Insights:
Why has velocity fallen even with strong GDP growth?
– Rise in financial inclusion, savings, digital payments.
– More money is parked in deposits, not spent immediately.
Does low velocity mean weak economy?
Not necessarily. In India’s case, it reflects structural change and financial maturity.
Why is actual M3 growth lower than theoretical?
– Inflation targeting, cautious monetary policy, and improved money absorption by the banking system.
Conclusion:
– India’s monetary expansion has supported growth, but has been carefully moderated.
– Falling velocity reflects formalization, not stagnation.
– RBI’s actual M3 policy was more conservative than what GDP/inflation alone would suggest — helping maintain macroeconomic balance.