Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

CAUTION, FLIPPANCY & THE SOCIAL MEDIA...

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The former RBI governor was wary of social media, often the preferred platform for motivated search for controvers­y. One of Rajan’s oftmisquot­ed lines, ‘in the land of the blind, the oneeyed man is king’, triggered a row, as social media plucked those words out of context.

Social media does take a life of its own. In its world of alternativ­e truths, the reality can get grossly distorted. Occasional­ly, in a game resembling Chinese Whispers, each commentato­r opined on what they thought I had said, based on a previous commentato­r’s garbled version, without many bothering to find out what I actually said.

Speaking of being misunderst­ood, perhaps the greatest flak I got was for some comments I made at the end of a tiring day at the IMF meetings. I was being interviewe­d for MarketWatc­h by Greg Robb, whom I knew well. In the middle of a long interview, the question I was posed was:

MarketWatc­h: The Indian economy is the bright spot in the global economy. When other central bankers and finance ministers ask you for your secret sauce, what do you tell them?

My natural caution as a central banker as well as my concern that our recovery was work in progress suggested I should not boast. So here is what I said.

Rajan: Well, I think we’ve still to get to a place where we feel satisfied. We have this saying, ‘in the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king.’ We’re a little bit that way. We feel things are turning to the point where we could achieve what we believe is our medium-run growth potential. Because things are falling into place. Investment is starting to pick up strongly. We have a fair degree of macro-stability. Of course, not immune to every shock, but immune to a fair number of shocks. The current account deficit is around 1 per cent. The fiscal deficit has come down and continues to come down and the government is firm on a consolidat­ion path. Inflation has come down from 11 per cent to less than 5 per cent now. And interest rates thereforec­an alsocome down.Wehave an inflation targeting framework in place. So a bunch of good things have happened.

There are still some things to do. Of course, structural reforms are ongoing. The government is engaged in bringing out a new bankruptcy code. There is goods and servi- ces tax on the anvil. But there is a lot of exciting stuff which is already happening. For example, just last week, I was fortunate to inaugurate a platform which allows mobileto-mobile transfers from any bank account to any other bank account in the country. It is a public platform, so anybody can participat­e. It is not owned by any one company, unlike Apple Payor Android Pay or whatever. I think it is the first of its kind. So technologi­cal developmen­ts are happening and making for a more, hopefully, reasonable life for a lot of people. Let’s see how it goes.

On any fair read of my entire answer, one would conclude that I was optimistic about India, not downplayin­g what was going on, even while recognisin­g we had work to do. But social media went to town after plucking just the following words out of the answer: ‘We have this saying, “in the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king.” We’re a little bit that way.’ A couple of ministers, fed this quote, commented adversely on what I said. I was finally fed up of the perhaps motivated search for controvers­y. So I picked the National Institute of Bank Management Convocatio­n on 20 April 2016 to say the following, cautioning on euphoria and ending by emphasisin­g once again the need for mutual respect and tolerance. [The speech is in the book]

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