The Bank Rate or Discount Rate is the rate at which the central bank (e.g., Reserve Bank of India) provides loans to commercial banks by discounting government securities or other high-quality securities. This is a key monetary policy tool used to regulate liquidity and influence credit availability in the economy. In contrast:
- Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) (option 2) is the percentage of a bank’s total deposits that must be held as reserves with the central bank, not a lending rate.
- Open Market Operations (OMO) (option 3) involve the buying or selling of government securities to control money supply, not direct lending.
- Cash Deposit Ratio (option 4) is not a standard monetary policy term; it may be confused with the Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR) or other reserve requirements.
Thus, option (1) is correct, as the Bank Rate or Discount Rate matches the description provided.