Business Standard

Y V Reddy slams govt for meddling in RBI affairs

- ANUP ROY More on business-standard.com

Former RBI governor Y V Reddy sharply criticised the government for intervenin­g in the central bank’s affairs and asking money from the past reserves. In a speech delivered at Pune on Friday, Reddy, who was also chairman of the 14th Finance Commission, endorsed critics stating that the “automatic monetisati­on of pre-reform period” is being replaced with “coercive monetisati­on of fiscal needs”.

In the Kale Memorial Lecture, delivered at Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics, Reddy said that by taking recourse to unpreceden­ted practice of interim dividend, the government has compromise­d on the establishe­d mechanism of “ways and means”, a temporary loan facility extended to the government by the RBI. The reserves act as insurance for the future, and needed to be fortified, instead of taken away.

“The immediate fiscal needs seem to take precedence over a renewed assessment of the capital needs of RBI,” Reddy said. This is contrary to what the Centre did in 2013 when it shared the excessive cost of sterilisat­ion so that the RBI balance sheet remains strong and reserves get added.

“There is merit in keeping at least the central bank's balance sheet strong if the government’s fiscal balance sheet is weak,” Reddy said.

The government expects ~28,000 crore as interim from the RBI and the finance minister recently said he expected another about an equal amount from past reserves as well.

In 2015, the government decided that the RBI holds more reserves than required and the entire money, therefore, should be transferre­d. The chief economic adviser had already advocated that the excess money should be used to recpaitali­se banks.

“There is no doubt that in the ultimate analysis, the government as the owner has a claim over the reserves, but the way it exercises gives signals to the market and influences public opinion,” he said.

There is also the issue of “constituti­onal propriety” of using the reserves directly to fund capital of the banks instead of crediting it to Consolidat­ed Fund of India.

The proposal to invoke Section 7 of the RBI Act, which is used by the government to direct the RBI what to do, was an “unpreceden­ted move”, which, in many ways, raised “fundamenta­l questions on governance,” Reddy said.

The invocation of the Act “virtually meant that the channels of normal communicat­ion for reaching agreed position between government and governor RBI had broken down”, and which ultimately culminated in Urjit Patel’s resignatio­n from the post of RBI governor.

The Centre’s demands of relaxing prompt corrective action rules for banks dilutes “both the autonomy and accountabi­lity of RBI”, Reddy said.

Reddy was also against government’s demand to dilute Basel III norms, which are perceived to be more stringent in India than the global norms.

There is merit in keeping at least the central bank's balance sheet strong if the government's fiscal balance sheet is weak Y V REDDY Former RBI Governor

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