RBI Governor Urjit Patel and Finance Minister Arun Jaitley. (Source: PTI)
7 years ago
Oct 31, 2018
Catch live updates from the government's clarification in the ongoing rift with the RBI, amid reports that Urjit Patel may step down as the central bank governor.
V Anantha Nageswaran, Dean of IFRM Business School said that he was disappointed with RBI Deputy Governor Viral Acharya's comments saying “financial markets will bring errant governments in line," he told BloombergQuint.
Ananth Narayan, professor at the SP Jain Institute of Management & Research, on the other hand, said that any interference in the RBI's decisions may affect foreign investment into the country. "If external investors start comparing India with the likes of Turkey instead of the U.S., the outcome won't be good," he said.
Columnist Sanjaya Baru dismissed the central bank’s warnings of a the fallout from the lack of the central bank’s independence. The final word cannot lie with the RBI, he said, calling Deputy Governor Viral Acharya’s speech “immature”.
Central bankers always know that the buck stops with the government
This is partly an ego-clash, and partly a case of genuine differences
Government has to listen to the RBI's views, but RBI's word can't be the final one
There's a problem of communication, we've gone from one extreme to the other
There was too much communication under Rajan & Subbarao, and now there's too little
Never understood this debate over RBI's autonomy, the buck has to stop with the government
There has been some confusion in the thinking of the government
Deputy governor's "immature" speech may have further provoked the government
Here’s what the professor of SP Jain Institute of Management and Research had to say about the growing differences between the centre and the RBI, and the government’s clarification around the issue
The 'terse' statement was welcome, because the expectation was a worst-case outcome
We should have never gotten to this point, this is a situation that we can do without
RBI and North Block must reconsider why they've taken the country to this point
Government may be trying find fiscal balance using RBI's reserves
RBI has 27 percent of balance sheet as capital and reserves, if you include revaluation reserves
The reserves aren't being held back, it's being lent to the government
Hope and pray the the government's end game is not to use RBI's reserves
The PCA banks could have been recapitized
Rather than taking on long-term reforms, the government thinking of short-term steps
The entire ecosystem that was supposed to keep the system safe does not come out looking good
Government, RBI, rating agencies don't come out looking good
Never waste a good crisis; economy is in good enough shape to pursue reforms
The statement from the government is very bland, Columnist TCA Srinivasa Raghavan told BloombergQuint, reacting to the development. Here are the key highlights of what he said.
The government couldn't have said anything more or anything less
If the government wants things to be done, they can.
It will be sad if things come down to invoking of Section 7 of the RBI Act.
I hope the Government and the RBI can sort this out without too much fuss
The government needs to decide on whether it needs RBI's money to bring down fiscal deficit or give people sops
The government is set to give a clarification on the on the reported rift between the Reserve Bank of India and the government, an official told reporters in New Delhi today, asking not to be identified citing rules.
Rajiv Kumar, secretary at the Department of Financial Services and Subhash Chandra Garg, secretary at the Department of Economic Affairs will issue the clarification. This comes days after Reserve Bank of India Deputy Governor Viral Acharya gave a strongly-worded speech on the central bank’s independence on Oct. 26.