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This Article is From Jun 08, 2017

Need To Accept Some Tension Between RBI And Finance Ministry: YV Reddy

Former RBI Governor YV Reddy on the tiff between RBI and finance ministry.

Need To Accept Some Tension Between RBI And Finance Ministry: YV Reddy
Yaga Venugopal Reddy, former Governor of the Reserve Bank of India. (Photographer: Santosh Verma/Bloomberg News)

A cut in interest rates will not necessarily increase liquidity and growth, former RBI governor Y V Reddy said on Thursday, amid rising tension between the central bank and the government after the former left key policy rate unchanged.

On Wednesday, Reserve Bank Governor Urjit Patel-led Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), in a slightly less hawkish policy statement, had said it was not cutting interest rates as it wanted to be more sure that inflation will stay subdued.

"We can't simply say growth has to pick up, private investment has to pick up, therefore reduce the interest rate. That's my limited point... I will still give benefit of doubt (to the MPC). The MPC in its wisdom would have considered all options. I can't find fault with the MPC decision," Reddy said on the sidelines of an event in Mumbai.

Pointing to the rigidities in the system, Reddy said, "Reduction in interest rates by itself does not increase credit flow."

Tension Between RBI And Finance Ministry?

According to the former governor, if the RBI agrees with the finance ministry all the time, then it is "superfluous". "And if it keeps disagreeing with the finance ministry, then it is obnoxious. I think some amount of tension (between the RBI and the finance ministry) we have to accept," he explained.

While leaving the repo rate unchanged for the fourth straight time at 6.25 percent – a six-and-half-year low – and reverse repo rate at 6 percent, RBI made it easier for banks to lend more by cutting the statutory liquidity ratio by 50 basis points to 20 percent of total deposits from June 24.

Also Read: ‘Respect' RBI's Authority To Decide Rates, Arun Jaitley Tells Bloomberg

SLR is the percentage of deposits banks must park in government securities.

The finance ministry has been pushing for a reduction in interest rates and its stand is seen at odds with the latest decision of the MPC. Even Chief Economic Advisor Arvind Subramanian openly expressed his frustration with the status quo.

There has been a call to reduce rates, given the economic slowdown and weak credit growth.

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