The Asian Age

Govt, RBI must work together, end turf war

- Parsa Venkateshw­ar Rao Jr Kajal Chatterjee Kolkata

The ostentatio­us turf battle between the Union finance ministry and the Reserve Bank of India is not the real issue. An independen­t RBI lends credibilit­y to any rules- based market economy. The finance ministry and the RBI are not adversarie­s, not rivals. The RBI is not exactly a watchdog. It’s one of the key players that manages India’s money supply and monetary policy.

In the ongoing tiff between the finance ministry and the central bank, the finance ministry is just being churlish in asserting its right to regulate the RBI. It is a right that has never been in question. The government can also claim the reserves that the RBI is holding. A ministry official has denied that the government is looking to put its hand into the till. It is, however, evident from the statements of finance minister Arun Jaitley and his top officials that the RBI was not being helpful in pushing the laggard economy into a brisk growth mode. RBI governor Urjit Patel had wryly and rightly observed that it wasn’t the job of the country’s central bank to manage the economy. So the real bone of contention is that the RBI is not cooperatin­g with the government in giving the economy a helping hand. Perhaps there is justificat­ion in the finance ministry’s grouse. But the ministry and the government will have to confess that the economy is not on track, and the government would want to put the central bank into service in facilitati­ng easier credit flow and friendly interest rates. The government is looking for ways of kickstarti­ng the economy. This implies that the government’s other policy measures have failed.

An angry Mr Jaitley wanted to know why the RBI had failed in its oversight duty of checking the increasing nonperform­ing assets of retail banks. But the RBI is not the babysitter of retail banks. The scheduled banks are expected to display financial prudence on their own as responsibl­e corporate entities. Of course, there is the bureaucrat­ic ritual of RBI inspection­s of banks, which should not be there in the first place. A bank that goes into the red should shut shop. The salvaging of troubled players is justified only on the basis of the too- big- to- fail criterion, which had come into play in the 2008 subprime crisis in the United States.

As India still reels under the socialist module of controllin­g economic activities, which the present government perpetuate­s, the public sector banks are pushed and prodded to finance government schemes, whether it be infrastruc­ture projects, agricultur­e loans and loan waivers, start- up ventures, et al. Somewhere this government interventi­on in the economy is running into the dead wall of failed policy, failed business ventures like the collapse of the Infrastruc­ture Leasing and Financial Services Ltd ( IL& FS). It is natural that the government wants the RBI to play the midwife to nonbanking financial companies ( NBFCs) in easing their liquidity crunch. But it is not right for the government in the long term to manipulate the RBI or scheduled banks or NBFCs to ignore the norms of fiscal prudence, even it means a localised and temporary liquidity squeeze. The political compulsion­s of an election- bound government are understand­able, but it does not cover up the gaping holes in a stuttering economy.

Despite the experts’ diagnosis that macrofunda­mentals were stable and the economy can withstand turbulence, there is an overwhelmi­ng apprehensi­on that there is a sharp turn ahead and that it could spell danger in a big way. There are the dire warnings that the global economy is heading towards another big crisis of the 2008 kind. That could rock the Indian economy and it would have political repercussi­ons. And this is sure to deflate the hyperbolic­al claims of Prime Minister Narendra Modi about the achievemen­ts of his government in the past four- and- a- half years. The opening of 33 crore new bank accounts will pale before the fact that there is not enough credit circulatio­n in the system.

It is in sheer desperatio­n then that the Modi government is looking for the proverbial scapegoats. The RBI seems to be a good potential candidate. The failures of the government on the economic front are now being sought to be blamed on the central bank. The Modi government is not alone in looking for alibis. Former finance minister P. Chidambara­m too was quite cross with the RBI and its governors, Duvvuri Subbarao and Raghuram Rajan, for not tweaking interest rates to stimulate the economy, but the Congress- led

India is really a market- driven economy, with its huge domestic market of hundreds of millions of consumers. The government should stop meddling with it as it did through demonetisa­tion. UPA government of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh refrained from faulting the RBI for the woes of the economy.

The Modi government­nominated RBI director S. Gurumurthy’s argument that the Indian economy is bank- driven like that of Japan and not market- driven like the United States is quite true. But a bankdriven system is the wrong model. It points to an economy that is governed, not at all the right thing for a market economy. India is really a market- driven economy, with its huge domestic market of hundreds of millions of consumers. The government should stop meddling with it as it did through demonetisa­tion. The problem then is not the RBI but the Modi government’s warped economic thinking.

It may be too late for the government to make a course correction of any kind. It appears that the fiscal deficit is at uncomforta­ble levels as the government has been spending on infrastruc­ture projects to keep the economy humming. The number of those filing tax returns may have doubled after demonetisa­tion, but it has not really translated into tax buoyancy. The reason is quite simple. The GDP growth rate has been modest in the past four years, so tax collection­s cannot be but modest as well. There has been no windfall accruals through spectrum auction. Disinvestm­ent has not fetched anything. The failure to find a strategic buyer for Air India speaks for itself. The government is really on a sticky wicket. Some of it is due to its own ineptness, and some due to global economic vagaries beyond its control. It’s not surprising that the claims of Prime Minister Modi and Mr Jaitley on the government’s economic achievemen­ts betray an unmistakab­le nervousnes­s.

The author is a Delhi- based commentato­r and analyst If the Congress is indeed the epitome of “dynasty” as alleged, may I know what is the track record of Prem Kumar Dhumal, Vasundhara Raje, Jaswant Singh, Pramod Mahajan, Gopinath Munde, Raman Singh, Rajnath Singh, Kalyan Singh, Maneka Gandhi ( to name a few) in this regard? Remember if you point fingers at someone else, three fingers are pointing back at you! THIS IS with reference to Pavan K. Varma’s article, Dialogue could resolve Ram temple issue ( Nov. 18). The necessity of a Ram temple in Ayodhya, the birthplace of Lord Ram, is self- proved. No party or community can oppose it. But the manner in which this issue is being tackled is evident that temple- constructi­on is only a rhetoric otherwise it would not have become such a burning issue. Ayodhya is fully entitled to have a temple by the virtue of being the motherland of Lord Vishnu carnation “Ram” but excessive politicisa­tion of the matter, particular­ly at the time of elections, gives enough ground to smell rat about the government’s stand. Mobilising people by assuaging religious feelings for political gains is not a healthy trend and unfortunat­ely, India has been facing this for decades. The worst form of all this is that even other parties are keeping religion’s importance above the developmen­tal issues to attract voters.

Rajendra Prasad Singh

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