Moving fast\, India names Modi demonetisation backer Shaktikanta Das as RBI head

Moving fast, India names Modi demonetisation backer Shaktikanta Das as RBI head

Reuters  |  MUMBAI 

By Suvashree Choudhury

The announcement by came just a day after resigned from the post, following months of clashes between the two institutions over lending curbs and how to deploy the central bank's surplus reserves.

Pressure on the to take immediate steps to boost the economy, including a transfer of the excess reserves to the government, could well rise after Modi's ruling suffered likely election losses in three key states on Tuesday.

Das - a high-profile backer of Modi's controversial 2016 move to scrap high-value currency notes, known as demonetisation - will serve a three-year term as governor,

watchers said they expected the 61-year-old, who retired last year as of economic affairs having previously served on the RBI's board, to put relations between the Mumbai-based and the in on a stabler footing.

Investors will also look closely at his ability to hold up against outside influences after recent efforts by the to gain greater control over the central bank's regulatory powers.

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

Investors said any openly political appointee with little macro-economic experience, would not sit well with financial markets that already sold off following the BJP's election setbacks.

But Ashish Vaidya, at DBS in Mumbai, said he expected India's debt and currency markets to react positively.

"He is a bureaucrat...We expect the to take a pragmatic approach under him, be pro-growth and change its stance going ahead given that inflation has come off sharply," he said.

told partner ANI that the government acknowledged the bank's independence.

"Government will fully support the RBI and coordinate with it in areas where consultations of government are required to make sure India's economy benefits from both government policy decisions and areas which fall within domain of the RBI," ANI tweeted, quoting Jaitley.

SWIFT APPOINTMENT

Pronab Sen, India's former chief statistician, 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 - widely seen as a contender for the top RBI job after Raghuram Rajan's term ended in 2016 - did not answer calls from to his mobile phone.

RBI officials who have worked with him closely said Das was likely to be more inclusive in the decision-making process than Patel.

"He has a balanced approach and is good at consensus building," said a former deputy "...We have had our fair share of differences. But he has always been solution-centric rather than festering on those differences."

Das worked in the under both and the previous coalition led by the main opposition party and was also involved in drafting the Insolvency and Bankruptcy code aimed at protecting small investors.

He came under fire for his pro-demonetisation stance and was the most vocal bureaucrat at the time the to fight tax evasion.

Das last year criticised the methodology of global rating agencies and sought a sovereign rating upgrade for

(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 John Stonestreet)

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

First Published: Wed, December 12 2018. 00:03 IST