English, asked by sweetychakma222, 7 months ago

what had remaining unchanged over the year?​

Answers

Answered by ankitbrainly83
2

Answer:

The Corona Virus pandemic

Explanation:

Hipe it helps you.

Answered by ammara39
2

Answer:

There is some good news for fixed income investors: the government has kept the interest rates on small savings schemes or post office schemes unchanged for the July-September quarter of FY 2020-21. This was announced via a Department of Posts circular dated July 1, 2020.

There is some good news for fixed income investors: the government has kept the interest rates on small savings schemes or post office schemes unchanged for the July-September quarter of FY 2020-21. This was announced via a Department of Posts circular dated July 1, 2020.According to the circular, in the second quarter of FY 2020-21, the Public Provident Fund (PPF) will continue to earn 7.10 per cent. The Senior Citizens Savings Scheme (SCSS) will continue to earn 7.40 per cent and post office time deposits will fetch 5.5-6.7 per cent. The interest rates will be applicable for the period starting July 1, 2020 to September 30, 2020.

Here is a look at the interest rates on various small savings schemes for the second quarter of FY 2020-21:

Good news for investors

Good news for investorsFor the previous quarter, that is, April-June 2020, the government had slashed rates of small savings schemes by 70-140 bps (100 bps = 1 per cent). If the government had cut rates for the second quarter as well in the similar fashion, then an investor-favourite instrument like the PPF would have fetched returns below the 7 per cent mark - a 46-year low.

It is not just low returns on small savings schemes that have been hurting fixed income investors for some time now. With the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cutting key rates over the past year or so, banks, too have been reducing interest rates on fixed deposits. Due to this, certain FD tenures are now fetching returns lower than even savings accounts.

It is not just low returns on small savings schemes that have been hurting fixed income investors for some time now. With the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cutting key rates over the past year or so, banks, too have been reducing interest rates on fixed deposits. Due to this, certain FD tenures are now fetching returns lower than even savings accounts.Interest rates on savings accounts, too, have not been spared. A State Bank of India savings account now earns 2.7 per cent per annum (with effect from May 31, 2020). An ICICI Bank savings account with a balance of less than Rs 50 lakh earns 3 per cent per annum (with effect from June 4, 2020). A Kotak Mahindra Bank (a bank whose USP has been its high interest rates on savings accounts, at one point earning 6 per cent) savings account with balance up to Rs 1 lakh now earns 3.5 per cent a year. For balances above Rs 1 lakh, Kotak Mahindra Bank is offering 4 per cent per annum.

With fixed income investors being in such dire straits, the government keeping interest rates unchanged on small savings schemes will offer some relief.

With fixed income investors being in such dire straits, the government keeping interest rates unchanged on small savings schemes will offer some relief.Post the announcement, post office savings account is offering interest rate of 4 per cent per annum which is higher or equivalent than the interest rate offered by leading banks on their savings accounts.

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