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An increasing acknowledgement that financial services hold the key to mainstreaming the poor and disadvantaged in India makes this detailed account of financial inclusion--both as a concept and as a veritable solution to aid in the country's development--a timely resource. The book states that the primary goal of financial inclusion is to broaden the scope of activities of the formal financial system, thus allowing people of low income to gradually participate in the system and thereby freeing the poor from poverty. The authors argue that important financial services such as credit, savings, insurance, and remittances should be provided at an affordable cost to low-income citizens. Topics discussed in the book include current financial exclusion; the roles of microfinance, banks, and nongovernmental organizations in financial inclusion; the Indian financial system; the credit needs of weaker sections of society in India; and Scheduled Castes development corporations.
About the author
S. Teki is a professor and the head of the department of management studies at Adikavi Nannaya University in Rajahmundry. R. K. Mishra is a senior professor at and the director of the Institute of Public Enterprise in Hyderabad, as well as a member of the United Nations Taskforce. He is a former fellow of the British Council and a former professor at the University of Bradford. He coedited "Compensation in Public Enterprises, Private Enterprises and MNCs in India" and "India and Russia."