India moves fast to name backer of Modi demonetisation as RBI head

Reuters  |  MUMBAI 

By Suvashree Choudhury

The announcement came a day after resigned from the post following months of fighting between the central and the government over restrictions on lending and the bank's surplus reserves.

A loss in three key states for Modi's ruling on Tuesday could raise pressure on the RBI to take immediate steps to boost the economy, including a transfer of the excess reserves to the government.

Das, a seasoned civil servant who retired last year as of economic affairs, will have a three-year term as of the of (RBI), effective immediately.

RBI watchers expect the 61-year-old, a key backer of Modi's controversial 2016 move to scrap high-value currency notes, known as demonetisation, to improve communication between the in and Mumbai-based RBI.

"Bonds and rupee should react positively following this news," said Ashish Vaidya, at in

"He is a bureaucrat and will help in improving the RBI-government relationship. We expect the RBI to take a pragmatic approach under him, be pro-growth and change its stance going ahead given that inflation has come off sharply."

Patel resigned following tension over the government's demand for the central bank to allow some to lend more easily. The government has also pushed the RBI to hand over some of its surplus reserves to help fund the fiscal deficit.

SWIFT APPOINTMENT

Pronab Sen, former chief of and to the erstwhile Planning Commission, said he was surprised by the speed of Das's appointment.

"If you have a situation where a position as important as the of the RBI is filled within 24 hours of the resignation of the incumbent, that will raise eyebrows," Sen told

"People are going to say, clearly this guy had already been identified. And, the situation was created where had to quit."

Das did not answer calls to his mobile phone. He had been widely seen as a contender for the top job at the RBI after the exit of former governor in 2016.

Known to be open to different opinions and a consensus builder, Das is likely to be more inclusive in the decision-making process than his predecessor while maintaining the central bank's autonomy, according to RBI officials who have worked with him closely.

"He is a very sensible fellow and has impeccable behaviour," said a former who worked with Das.

"He has a balanced approach and is good at consensus building. I have worked with him closely and we have had our fair share of differences. But he has always been solution centric rather than festering on those differences."

Das, who previously served on the central bank's board, came under fire for his pro-demonetisation stance and was the most vocal bureaucrat at the time Modi withdrew the to fight tax evasion.

Das last year criticised the methodology of global rating agencies and sought a sovereign rating upgrade for India. Das has worked extensively in the budget division under both and the previous coalition led by the main opposition party.

While in the finance ministry, Das was involved in drafting India's Insolvency and Bankruptcy code, aimed at protecting small investors.

After the recent efforts by the to gain greater control over the central bank's regulatory powers, investors will look closely at Das' ability to hold up against such pressure.

"The will have to work hard to prove that he has his own independent mind despite his background," said Deepak Jasani, at

Foreign and domestic investors earlier said any openly political appointee with little macro-economic experience, would not sit well in equity, currency and debt markets that have already sold-off following setbacks suffered by the BJP in state polls.

(Reporting by in and Krishna V Kurup in BENGALURU; Additional reporting by Neha Dasgupta, and in and Rajendra Jadhav in MUMBAI; Writing by Krishna N. Das; Editing by and Ed Osmond)

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

First Published: Tue, December 11 2018. 21:46 IST