Business Standard

M K JAIN NAMED RBI DEPUTY GOVERNOR

- ANUP ROY & SOMESH JHA

IDBI Bank Managing Director M K Jain will be the fourth deputy governor

of the Reserve Bank of India, filling the vacancy after S S Mundra retired on July 31 last year. His term is three years. He is expected to be put in charge of banking supervisio­n, among other duties. In which case, he will have his hands full.

IDBI Bank managing director M K Jain will be the fourth deputy governor of the Reserve Bank of India, filling the vacancy after S S Mundra retired on July 31 last year. His term is three years.

He is expected to be put in charge of banking supervisio­n, among other duties. In which case, he will have his hands full. The Basel-III norms took effect on May 17 and Jain will have to lead banks in implementa­tion on the new requiremen­ts on liquidity. In the medium to long term, he will have to grapple with bad debts of the banking system and guide on corrective action. Transmissi­on of rate changes by RBI is another policy challenge.

Jain is also expected to be a communicat­ion bridge between governor Urjit Patel and bankers on various issues, most importantl­y on the bankruptcy code and the stricter Non-Performing Asset (NPA) recognitio­n norms RBI instituted on February 12. Under these, even a day’s default could lead a company to bankruptcy proceeding­s.

Jain has a little over 30 years of experience as a banker and was managing director and chief executive of government-owned IDBI Bank since March 2017. He was previously heading Indian Bank, for two years. A deputy governor gets a fixed salary of ~2.25 lakh a month, plus allowances.

Analysts say Jain is known as a person with out-of-box ideas. He is also considered a ‘turnaround king’ for the way he proceeded to clean Chennai-based Indian Bank’s bad debt. He reportedly disposed of ~30 billion worth of bad debt to asset reconstruc­tion companies in no more than a couple of meetings.

“He dictated his terms, and made an offer that was fair to all parties, and left very little scope for negotiatio­n. He made Indian Bank relatively healthy and that is why he was brought to IDBI Bank,” said an analyst, aware of his negotiatio­n style.

Generally, the appointmen­ts are for three years, after which the government decides on renewal if the incumbent has not reached the retirement age of 62. Jain, aged 55, qualifies for reappointm­ent on that front when his three years end.

Jain has also served on the boards of Exim Bank and National Institute of Bank Management. He

JAIN IS SEEN AS A COMMUNICAT­ION BRIDGE BETWEEN GOVERNOR URJIT PATEL AND BANKERS, MOST IMPORTANTL­Y ON THE BANKRUPTCY CODE AND THE STRICTER NPA RECOGNITIO­N NORMS THAT THE RBI INSTITUTED ON FEBRUARY 12

has also been a part of several committees in the banking sector, including as a secretary to the Basant Seth committee on review and revamp of the audit system in public sector banks (PSBs). And, as a member on a government-constitute­d committee on public interest litigation related to NPAs. He also played a role in redesignin­g the annual performanc­e appraisal reports at PSBs.

The finance ministry had 37 applicatio­ns for the post. Under the RBI Act, the central bank should have four deputy governors — two from within the ranks, one commercial banker and one economist.

Beside Jain, UCO Bank executive director Charan Singh and State Bank of India managing directors B Sriram and P K Gupta were among contenders for the post. Some bureaucrat­s had also applied and were interviewe­d. K P Krishnan, secretary, skill developmen­t and entreprene­urship; Yaduvendra Mathur additional secretary, NITI Aayog, and T V Somanathan, a principal secretary in Tamil Nadu, were among the shortliste­d candidates in the bureaucrac­y.

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“Prime Minister Modi had given a call for a BRICS Counter-Terrorism Strategy for joint-action with a focus on money laundering, terrorist-finance, cyber-space and de-radicalisa­tion as our priorities” SUSHMA SWARAJ External Affairs Minister

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