The Sun (Malaysia)

Modi stacks Indian central bank board with allies

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NEW DELHI/MUMBAI: As Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government turns up the heat on the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor to do its bidding ahead of next year’s general election it is getting the central bank ‘s board to take on a much more powerful role, according to government officials and board members.

Now stacked with government nominees who can be counted on to support the administra­tion, the board is being transforme­d from having a passive advisory role into a body that can exert pressure for policy change. Some economists fear it could threaten the bank’s independen­ce.

Two board members told Reuters that government pressure for easier lending policies is likely to become abundantly clear at today’s board meeting the first to be held since the extent of a deep rift between the RBI and the government became public knowledge.

With the election due by May, and voters concerned about weak farm incomes and whether enough jobs are being created, Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is keen to stimulate the economy and sees the RBI’s hawkish stance as a barrier, said government officials and BJP allies.

The government has been pressing the Mumbai-based RBI and governor Urjit Patel to accede to a range of demands that could help to boost demand. They include making it easier and cheaper for small businesses to borrow, easing lending curbs on 11 state-run banks which had debt and capital adequacy issues, and providing more liquidity to shadow lenders. I’m intrigued by platform businesses like Uber and Airbnb and their successes despite not having any assets, inventory or people in the traditiona­l sense.

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They also want the government to have access to surplus reserves the RBI has built up - money that could be used for the administra­tion’s populist programmes including boosts to rural wages, fuel subsidies and buying crops at a guaranteed minimum price.

The RBI has hit back by questionin­g whether the government wanted to destroy its autonomy and warning that when this happened in Argentina in 2010, financial markets took fright.

The Finance Ministry and RBI spokesmen declined to comment for this story.

In the past week there have been signs of an uneasy truce as some government officials indicated they didn’t want Patel to resign and would allow some issues to be kicked down the road.

But at the same time, Modi supporters have made it clear they want major policy change, and a senior finance ministry official said some government backers on the board had been given the green light to push hard at today’s meeting.

Spearheadi­ng that push is new board member S. Gurumurthy, a confidante of Modi’s. He is an accountant and columnist who was until recently co-convenor of the Swadeshi Jagaran Manch, the economic wing of the Hindu nationalis­t Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh, which is the fountainhe­ad of the BJP.

In a speech last week, Gurumurthy lashed out at the RBI’s restrictio­ns on bank lending, saying it was damaging the economy.

“We are a bank-driven economy ... in a bank-driven economy if you restrict the banks, you are restrictin­g the economy, you are restrictin­g the flow of funds into the economy,” he said.

Under the colonial era RBI Act, the government can give the bank directions after consultati­ons with the governor. That law establishe­s the primacy of the RBI board to do “all acts and things” subject to government directions. It also empowers New Delhi to dismiss any board member – including the governor.

In practice, the government has never invoked those sections of the act. For many decades, RBI governors have enjoyed operationa­l freedom, though they have traditiona­lly worked closely with the government, said an official directly aware of such consultati­ons.

The board also doesn’t have direct influence over interest rate policy. In 2016, Modi agreed to establish a monetary policy committee to set interest rates based on whether India was meeting an inflation target. It consists of three RBI officials and three government-appointed members, with the central bank governor having the casting vote.

Modi supporters are confident newly appointed members of the RBI board with a “nationalis­t vision” could over time press it to cut interest rates, transfer surplus funds to the government and ease bank lending curbs.

The RBI board will seek more accountabi­lity from the governor, said Ashwani Mahajan, who is co-convenor of the Swadeshi Jagaran Manch.

“Now the RBI will be functionin­g in a more prudent manner looking at the specific needs of the country,” he said.

Provided Modi gets re-elected, the RBI board could ensure a greater role for banks “in the social and economic transforma­tion of the country”, he added.

Modi has packed the RBI board in the past few months with people with links to his party and economists who favour greater overnment influence over the RBI.

It means that of 18 current members, five come from the government bureaucrac­y, two are finance ministry officials, and two have close links to Modi and the BJP. Four have a business background, and the other five are Patel and his four deputy governors. – Reuters

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