The law empowers the government to consult and give instructions to the governor to act on certain issues that the state considers to be in the public interest. The letters prompted Deputy Governor Viral Acharya’s hard-hitting speech on Friday, in which he warned that toying with the central bank’s independence could lead to dire consequences, the people said.
Representatives at the Reserve Bank weren’t immediately available for comment. Economic Affairs Secretary Subhash Chandra Garg declined to comment, while Finance Secretary Hasmukh Adhia said it was for the Department of Economic Affairs to clarify on Section 7 of the law.
The letters are the latest flare-up in a dispute between the central bank and the government. The RBI under Patel has been pushing for more powers to clean up a banking system saddled with bad debts. The RBI has put lending curbs on some weak state-run banks, while the government -- facing an election early next year -- wants to ensure banks continue to lend to boost economic growth.
“The blame game can continue,” Sonal Varma, chief India economist at Nomura Inc., told Bloomberg Television. “India cannot afford these mistakes. The last thing India needs is to spoil the macro picture with this rift.”
Central banks around the world are facing heat from political leaders. U.S. President Donald Trump expressed his unhappiness with the Federal Reserve’s pace of tightening while Turkey’s leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan attacked his country’s central bank for rate hikes.
On Tuesday, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley blamed the RBI for India’s huge bad debt pile up, saying it “looked the other way” while banks were allowed to lend indiscriminately in the aftermath of the global financial crisis. While those criticisms refer to events before Patel was governor, they can also be viewed as a counter to Acharya’s comments.
ET Now, a local television station, said on Wednesday that if the Reserve Bank refused to act on liquidity constraints, the government will not shy away from taking steps against it. The channel didn’t identify the people for the information.
“I am not expecting the rift between the RBI and the government to widen, though prolonged tensions cannot be fully ruled out considering the political angle to it in the run-up to the general elections," said Prakash Sakpal, an economist at ING Bank NV in Singapore.
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