Government to run power play at next RBI board meeting: sources

Reuters  |  MUMBAI/NEW DELHI 

By and Manoj Kumar

A majority of the 18-member board, now stacked with government nominees, intends to press for reduced curbs on lending and governance changes that would give the board more say, according to three sources with direct knowledge of what was said when the board last met on Nov. 19.

Like the government, most board members feel that should be "more transparent and accountable" for its decisions, said one source, who was also aware of discussions held subsequently within the government.

Prior to the November meeting, senior officials in had cranked up pressure, publicly and privately, on policy matters, raising fears among former central bankers that the was at risk of losing independence.

With a due by May, and voters concerned about weak farm incomes and whether enough jobs are being created, Modi is keen to stimulate the and is looking for the to allow easier lending policies.

"The relationship between the RBI and the government is like a stretched now," said a former top RBI "Once stretched the will never return to its original size. The memory of this significant assault on the autonomy of the will last for a long time."

The worsening atmosphere between the government in and the in fed earlier this month that RBI might consider resigning.

In the past, the board has acted as little more than an advisory body, but under the 1934 law that established the central bank it has the ability to possess real teeth and force policy change.

To speed along its transformation, the government has appointed experts from various fields, including accounting, technology and to the board.

At its next meeting, it is likely to review how the central bank and the board engage, as well as the functioning of the sub-committees of the board, the sources said.

"The next board will take up the agenda pending from the earlier two meetings," a second source said. "This mainly includes governance at the central bank, the relationship between the board and the RBI and other related issues."

Those other issues could include providing more liquidity support to a weakened non-banking sector, functioning of the sub-committees of the central board and easing lending curbs on 11 state-run banks who are under a prompt corrective action plan (PCA) imposed by the RBI.

"RBI governance, PCA and liquidity are our top priorities," said the first source, adding he expected the RBI to accept the that viewpoint sooner rather than later.

Ex-RBI officials, including a and a deputy governor, said that never before has the board tried to interfere in the central bank's regulatory functions.

The Ministry and RBI spokesmen did not have a comment for this story.

"HOSPITAL INFECTION" RISK

Top government officials have pressed the RBI to ease capital rules for banks, provide more liquidity to the shadow banking sector, support lending to small businesses and let the government use more of the RBI's surplus reserves to boost the

At its meeting last week, the RBI's board had decided that a sub-committee will look into the matter of easing curbs for the 11 banks and make recommendations to the board.

That decision had followed on from the October board meeting, which noted an improvement among some banks under the PCA, based on parameters including bad loan recovery, higher deposit growth.

At that time, the RBI had wanted to wait a while longer to see if the improvement was sustained before lifting the curbs, a third source said. But the government believes waiting would invite more risks and expects the RBI to lift curbs on four of the lenders.

"We can't leave a patient in the hospital for a longer period as it faces a risk of catching an or spreading among other patients," the second source said, adding that the PCA list could not be a static one.

Unhappy about such pressure, late last month RBI Deputy warned that undermining central could be "catastrophic".

That triggered a public spat between the two sides and tension in the run-up to the board meeting last month at which the RBI agreed to relax an international capital norm for banks.

The board also entrusted the government and the RBI to set up a committee to decide on a specific method of transferring surplus reserves from the central bank to the government, a thorny matter for both sides.

"The main issue that underlines the rift is that the government feels that there has been inadequate and between the government and the RBI on all these issues," said the third source.

(Edited by & Simon Cameron-Moore)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, November 28 2018. 14:15 IST