Finally, the general narrative that finance has not changed in large part is flawed in several respects, and these too need to be kept in mind. The growth of extraordinary monetary policy measures, alongside greater regulation, has meant that finance has abandoned its duty to examine and price risk for speculation on the future direction of such measures. Banks’ search for growth, especially in the developing world, has largely ended, and handed off instead to high-value hedge funds and private equity firms. This means that Indian companies find it difficult to access global bank finance, relying instead on the equity markets, high-value investors or local resources. This is a big change since 2008, and lies at the root of India’s current capital funding crunch. The development cost of the response to 2008, and not just the crisis, needs to be properly evaluated.