Business Standard

Central bank is not independen­t from govt: Former RBI guv

- GIREESH BABU

Former Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor YV Reddy ( pictured) said the central bank had been created by the government to bring in trust and faith and it could not be independen­t from its creator.

The substantiv­e elements of economic policies remain the same since 1991, despite several changes in the political leadership and this change is not making any significan­t difference to the continuing pragmatic approach, he added.

“A central bank has been created by the government, not by the Constituti­on. It has been created to assure people that money and finance are important, and are apolitical. So, please have faith. Anything ‘created’ cannot be independen­t from its ‘creator’,” he said. He was responding to a question on whether the post of RBI governor and the institutio­n have been diluted in the past 12-15 months.

Reddy was speaking at the fourth G Ramachandr­an Memorial Lecture organised by the Southern Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Chennai.

On the economic policies, he said, “The rhetoric of economic policies, the presentati­on and the style has changed, but the substance remains the same. There form that was consensust­he past is now agenda based. There is a greater emphasis on implementa­tion, a determined effort to bring about fundamenta­l changes.”

The balance between the state and the market continues to be governed by pragmatic considerat­ions. The private sector is encouraged incrementa­lly, but the public sector does not retreat. In regard to the interface between the state and the market, efforts are intensifie­d to reduce collusion and improve cooperatio­n, he said.

However, the task ahead is complicate­d by the fact that building institutio­nal framework for a modern middle income country, replacing a contact-based system with a contract-based one, is time consuming and complex.

The trend towards globalisat­ion has been stalled at a time India wants to take advantage of globalisat­ion. There are more uncertaint­ies in regard to global economic order than ever before. Yet, India has a better standing in the global investment community, with prospects better than most of the developing peers. The sense of optimism about the future is more in India compared to most other countries.

On Moody’s rating he said, “It is interestin­g that many people are saying that credit rating agencies generally do not give proper credit to India, instead they give a lower credit. When Moody’s gave its latest rating, they said it had given a higher credit rate to India. Both the ruling and the Opposition parties have agreed that credit rating is wrong, but we don’t know what is right.”

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