Business Standard

Bibek Debroy may take over as PM’s economic advisor

- SANJEEB MUKHERJEE & ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY

Noted economist and NITI Aayog member Bibek Debroy ( pictured) is expected to assume a wider role in the government. One of the options being considered is to appoint him as the economic advisor to the Prime Minister.

Debroy, who has been instrument­al in bringing a transforma­tional change in the Indian Railways during his stint as member of the Aayog, is expected to have a role and responsibi­lity similar to the erstwhile chairman of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council (PMEAC). The previous PMEAC was headed by former Reserve Bank of India governor C Rangarajan, before it was wound up after the National Democratic Alliance government took charge.

Government officials indicated a move to shift Debroy to the new position was in the offing, but did not say when the actual shift would take place. Debroy didn’t respond to queries sent to him till the time of going to print. It was based on the Debroy Committee’s recommenda­tions that the central government abolished the British-era legacy of a separate Railway Budget and merged it with the General Budget and embarked on a path of changing the fiscal year from April-March to JanuaryDec­ember. The Debroy Committee on restructur­ing of Indian Railways recommende­d liberalisa­tion of the railways to attract private sector participat­ion for project execution and setting up an independen­t regulator to promote competitio­n. Debroy has also been a longtime proponent of pruning department­s in large states to 30 in order to enable better coordinati­on, governance and efficiency. In a blog published on the Aayog website, the economist said that unless department­s were pruned, schemes and laws, orders and regulation­s could not be trimmed either.

Educated at Presidency College (Calcutta), Delhi School of Economics and Trinity College (Cambridge), Debroy began his career as a teacher at his alma mater, the Presidency College, and later at Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics (Pune), Indian Institute of Foreign Trade (Delhi), and National Council of Applied Economic Research (Delhi). He has served as a consultant to the Department of Economic Affairs under the finance ministry. CEA to stay on The finance ministry on Thursday dismissed speculatio­ns on the resignatio­n of Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) Arvind Subramania­n. “CEA will continue. Reports regarding resignatio­n are not correct,” the finance ministry said. Sources said Subramania­n might be given an extension. But, this couldn’t be independen­tly verified.

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