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Tussle for power: what’s the RBI-government stand-off?
News:
- The article discusses about the simmering tensions between the Reserve Bank of India and the Centre which found spectacular release recently through a public speech by Deputy Governor Viral Acharya.
Important Facts:
- A certain amount of creative tension is systemically in-built between Reserve Bank of India and Centre given their different perspectives.
- For example, Centre’s concern is short-term and political while RBI’s concern is long-term and technical.
- Though such tension is good for the economy, but there are few issues over which both the Centre and RBI are irked over each other.
- Centre- RBI Conflict:
- Non-Performing Assets: Centre has refused to accept Governor Urjit Patel’s point that the RBI is hobbled by lack of adequate powers in regulating public sector banks to handle the non-performing assets crisis.
- Though the RBI expresses concerns about not having enough powers over PSBs but it does have nominee directors on bank boards which leads physical inspection and financial audits at banks.
- Forex reserve and fiscal deficit: The Centre is eyeing RBI’s burgeoning reserves to bridge its fiscal gap which RBI resents.
- Payments regulator: The Centre is attempting to set up an independent payments regulator, which the RBI sees as encroachment of its jurisdiction.
- Recent tensions: The government’s intervention through the board sparked recent tensions between RBI and Centre as follows:
- RBI’s recent circular on stressed assets recognition: According to RBI recent circular, if a borrower delayed payment for even one day, he should be dragged to an insolvency court and the asset classified as a non-performing asset (NPA).
- Diluted PCA: The Centre sees the prompt corrective action (PCA) framework by the RBI, which restricts weak banks from lending, as contributing to the liquidity crisis and wants it to be diluted.
- Relaxed lending norms: Centre also wanted special dispensation by the RBI to help non-banking finance companies (NBFCs) apart from relaxed norms for lending to micro, small and medium enterprises.
- Way forward:
- The RBI could have heeded the Centre’s signals on easing liquidity through extraordinary measures in addition to routine open market operations to ease the liquidity crises.
- So, the Centre and the central bank must talk behind closed doors and resolve their differences as mature entities in an amicable manner.
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