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Rajan did not imply world economy was at risk: RBI

Rajan was quoted as saying that global economy is 'slowly slipping' into Great Depression-like problems of 1930s

Raghuram Rajan
ANI New Delhi
Last Updated : Jun 28 2015 | 6:25 PM IST
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Sunday clarified that a section of Raghuram Rajan's remarks at the AQR conference at London Business School on June 25 has been mis-characterised, as saying 'the world is at risk of a Great Depression".

"What Governor Rajan did say, in his remarks made off the attached written text, was that the policies followed by major central banks around the world were in danger of slipping into the kind of beggar-thy-neighbour strategies that were followed in the 1930s," Principal Chief General Manager of RBI, Alpana Killawala, said in an official release.

As per the release, the governor then called for new rules of the game in the international monetary system, a call that he has made before, and is gaining some traction.

"The Great Depression was a period of great turmoil, caused by many factors and not just beggar-thy-neighbour policies. Governor Rajan did not imply or suggest that there was any risk of the world economy, which is in steady recovery notwithstanding uncertainties like those in the Euro area, slipping into a new Great Depression," she added.

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First Published: Jun 28 2015 | 6:20 PM IST

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