Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

RBI buys time to review governance framework

The decision will for now reassure investors about the central bank’s autonomy

- Bloomberg

MUMBAI/NEW DELHI: The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’S) board on Friday bought more time to review the government’s demand for a greater say in the central bank’s functionin­g, one of the issues that had fostered hostilitie­s between the two sides.

“The board deliberate­d on the governance framework of the RBI and it was decided that the matter required further examinatio­n,” the central bank said in a statement after the meeting in Mumbai.

The status quo will for now reassure investors about the central bank’s autonomy, as the new governor Shaktikant­a Das was seen as someone more amenable to the government’s requests. Prime Minister Narendra Modi named Das to the post a day after Urjit Patel abruptly resigned as governor after clashing with the government over its demands to ease lending curbs on state-run banks and hand over more of the RBI’S capital to the state.

Yielding to the government’s demands may raise questions on the central bank’s autonomy and have a bearing on the credit rating of one of the world’s fastestgro­wing major economies.

The “meeting failed to shed any new light on governor Das’s stance on banking regulation and other issues,” said Priyanka Kishore, head of India and South East Asia Economics at Oxford Economics, Singapore. “RBI is clearly trying to let matters cool before making any further decisions on these fronts.”

The 18-member board, which includes monetary policy makers, finance ministry representa­tives and industrial­ists, also reviewed matters relating to liquidity and credit delivery to the economy, besides discussing the current economic situation, global and domestic challenges, according to the statement.

Ahead of the meeting, Piyush Goyal, a top minister in Modi’s government, took to Twitter to accuse the central bank of wielding power without accountabi­lity and acting unilateral­ly in dealing with banks burdened by bad loans. That prompted some to see this as a “frightenin­g” peek into what’s in store for Das as he settles into the new role.

“It’s frightenin­g because it’s very important to show respect for the process,” said Abhijit Banerjee, a professor of economics at Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology. “Das is going to worry he got chosen because he’s not the best person for the job but because he is someone who the government favoured.”

“He will feel he doesn’t have independen­t authority,” Banerjee said. Still, some see Das’s appointmen­t as an end to hostilitie­s that came to mark the relations between the RBI and the government in the Patel-era. Swaminatha­n Gurumurthy, a Hindu nationalis­t and journalist appointed by the Modi government as an independen­t board member in August, backed the new governor’s conciliato­ry approach to the government. He was referring to Das’s first media briefing on Wednesday when the governor said the government deserves to be consulted.

“I don’t know if the relationsh­ip is good or not, but we have to have stakeholde­rs consultati­on,” said Das, who was Modi’s key lieutenant when he unveiled his controvers­ial plan to invalidate 86% of the currency notes in late 2016.

 ?? MINT ?? The board deliberate­d on RBI’S governance framework and decided to go for further discussion­s
MINT The board deliberate­d on RBI’S governance framework and decided to go for further discussion­s

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