India FSAP 2025: Key Takeaways and Policy Recommendations

– Chirag Agarwal, Assistant Manager | chirag@vinodkothari.com

A joint World Bank-IMF team visited India in 2024 to update the findings of the Financial Sector Assessment Program (FSAP), which took place in 2017. World Bank on October 30, 2025 released the report1 which summarises the main findings of the mission, identifies key financial development issues, and provides policy recommendations.

We were in touch with the FSA team for our recommendations on certain aspects. The FSA recommendation on leasing (discussed below) is based on our feedback.

This article discusses in brief the key takeaways from the FSA Report.

Key Takeaways:

  1. Stronger and More Diversified Financial System: As per the report, India’s financial system has become more resilient, inclusive, and diversified since the previous 2017 assessment. Non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) and market financing (other than from banks) now account for 44% of total financial assets—up from 35% in 2017—reflecting deeper financial intermediation beyond banks.
  2. Reforms Critical for India’s 2047 Growth Vision: The report suggests that to achieve the target of a USD 30 trillion economy by 2047, India must modernize its financial architecture to channel both domestic and foreign savings into productive investment, deepen capital markets, and attract long-term infrastructure and green financing2.
  3. Macroprudential Tools: The assessment highlights rising systemic risks due to financial diversification and interlinkages. It recommends expanding data collection and deploying macroprudential tools—including introducing Debt Service to Income (DSTI) limits across banks and NBFCs and building counter-cyclical capital buffers (CCyBs) for banks to manage liquidity, intersectoral contagion, household credit risks, and climate-related financial risks
  4. Regulatory and Supervisory Enhancements: While India’s regulatory oversight framework for banks, insurers, and markets is broadly sound, lingering issues include state influence on regulators, limited powers over governance of state-owned entities, and gaps in conglomerate and climate-risk supervision. The report suggests that efforts should be made to ensure better coordination between regulators and extending the scope of the regulatory and supervisory frameworks.
  5. Banking and NBFC Reforms: The report stresses adoption of IFRS 9, enforcing Pillar 2 capital add-ons, and elimination of prudential exemptions for state-owned NBFCs. It also suggests considering additional liquidity requirements tailored to different business models.
  6. Tax  treatment of leasing: The report suggests that to diversify MSME finance the tax treatment of leasing should be reviewed to ensure an equal treatment between lease and debt transactions. At present, interest on loans is exempted under the GST laws and hence, there is no GST levied on the loan repayments, however, the entire rentals are subject to GST in case of financial leases.
  7. Transfer of oversight function of NHB to RBI: While regulation of HFCs moved to RBI in 2019, supervision still rests with NHB, which follows a limited, compliance-based approach. Shifting supervision to RBI would strengthen oversight and remove the conflict of interest since NHB also acts as promoter and refinancer for HFCs.
  8. MSME Finance: The report recommends integrating TReDs with the e-invoicing portal for automatic invoice uploads. It also suggests incentivizing large buyers and mandating state-owned enterprises to upload invoices to improve cash flow for MSMEs. Further, the report also mentions that SIDBI’s funding support to NBFCs, including NBFC factors, should be increased, along with developing credit enhancement and guarantee facilities for NBFC bonds and MSME loan securitizations.
  1. https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/099103025110514063/pdf/BOSIB-606133f7-2e00-4696-9b41-57f3737d140d.pdf
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  2. See our resources on sustainable financing: https://vinodkothari.com/resources-on-sustainability-finance/  ↩︎

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