Millennium Post

RBI reserves: Jalan panel may line up `3 trillion for transfer

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MUMBAI: The Bimal Jalan committee on the appropriat­e capital reserves for the Reserve Bank is likely to identify an excess buffer of up to Rs 3 lakh crore, according to a foreign brokerage.

This includes the excess capital in contingenc­y reserves and also revaluatio­n reserves, a report by Bank of America Merrill Lynch said Monday, amid reports that the panel is almost ready with its report.

As of September last, the excess capital with the central bank stood at Rs 9.6 lakh crore.

"Our stress tests estimate RBI'S excess capital at Rs 1-3 lakh crore," the report said.

Halving of the contingenc­y reserves to a level of 3.25 percent from the present 6.5 percent will release Rs 1.282 lakh crore, the report said, pointing out that the level is still 50 percent higher than what central banks in the BRICS grouping have.

Similarly, halving the yield cover hike to 4.5 percent from the present 9 percent will release another Rs 1.170 lakh crore, it said.

Capping the overall reserves at 20 percent level from the present 25.5 percent will release Rs 1.96 lakh crore, it said, adding the level is higher than the 2004 Usha Thorat committee recommenda­tion of 18 percent and 16 percent that the Economic Survey 2018 had pegged.

The report further noted that there is no restrictio­n which prevents the RBI from transferri­ng the money to the government.

The six-member panel headed by former RBI governor Jalan was set up following a widespread debate triggered by a government move last year to get a part of the RBI reserves transferre­d ahead of the elections.

Then governor Urjit Patel was against any such move, while other experts like former chief economic advisor Arvind Subramania­m, had advocated using the windfall for specific tasks like bank recapitali­sation which will help the economy.

Using the excess money for bank recapitali­sation will be

liquidity neutral, the brokerage said, adding the Jalan report will also help ushering cuts in

lending rates.

After Patel's sudden resignatio­n over this and many other contentiou­s issues, his successor Shaktikant­a Das had formed the panel in consultati­on with the government and the panel was expected to submit its report by March end.

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