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RBI's identity has been damaged: Former gov

January 10, 2017 06:05 IST

'For the RBI, for a central bank, reputational risk is the worst risk.'
'Credibility is the worst risk,' says former RBI governor.
Anup Roy reports.

RBI Governor Dr Urjit Patel, right, with Finance Minister Arun Jaitley. Photograph: PTI Photo

Former Reserve Bank of India governor Y V Reddy criticised the state of affairs at the central bank, stating that the institutional identity of the hallowed organisation has been damaged.

In an interview with CNBC-TV18, Reddy, who served as RBI governor between September 2003 and 2008, said the impression was the central bank was now only responsible for monetary policy.

Earlier, the impression was the RBI governor was as powerful as a minister.

'Now, there is a committee where the Cabinet secretary is the chair and the governor is a member,' he said.

The government in May 2016 formed a search-cum-selection panel headed by Cabinet Secretary Pradeep Kumar Sinha to select the RBI's deputy governors.

This was seen as a significant infringement on the autonomy of the central bank; earlier, the RBI governor used to head the panel for selection of his deputies.

'To be very frank, my own suspicion is that the institutional identity of the RBI has been damaged. Earlier, the RBI was the monetary authority. But it was a full-service central bank. The recent emphasis is that monetary policy is the main function,' Reddy said.

'Then is he (the RBI governor) not accountable to regulation? Is he not accountable to currency coins? There is confusion about relative importance. That relative importance is being decided more outside than within.'

'The procedure applicable for a regulator has to be different from the procedure applicable to the monetary authority,' he added. 'In a central bank, regulation is one function. There is some lack of clarity.'

However, this devaluation in the status of the RBI is not a recent event, and 'cuts across political affiliations,' Reddy said.

Comments from economists and rating agencies about the RBI were 'disturbing'.

'For the RBI, for a central bank, reputational risk is the worst risk. Credibility is the worst risk. And if this is happening in the international opinion, I would say that it is a national problem now and it is not just a political issue.'

'I think it is time, it is like army which is the security of the country, the financial and monetary security of the country. So, there should be a debate at this juncture given the type of comments internationally cutting across political parties that what should be the nature of central bank and what it should be and how it should be run.'

However, he did not blame any individual.

'The limited point is, the role of central bank in our economy is under threat and it is a national problem, which has to be addressed as a national problem.'

IMAGE: RBI Governor Dr Urjit Patel, right, with Finance Minister Arun Jaitley. Photograph: PTI Photo

Anup Roy
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