The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has reallocated the portfolios of deputy governors, moving a major chunk of the responsibility to three of them.
Gokarn, who is in-charge of the monetary policy department, will also get human resources and department of administration and personnel management. Thorat will get rural planning and credit department, and urban banks. Shyamala Gopinath will get additional charge of payment and settlement.
Chakrabarty will continue to look after customer services, inspection, information and technology and the rajbhasha department.
The reshuffle follows a no-holds barred attack last week by a senior RBI official on the monetary policy announced by the bank. The official had criticised the policy before reporters just two days after its announcement, saying the country needed a more aggressive policy. He had said the current level of rates were woefully low, and if the central bank was serious about pulling down inflation from its current level, it should have raised the rates more.
RBI has re-allocated the portfolios of deputy governors for the first time since June 2009, after one of the deputy governors then, Rakesh Mohan, quit to pursue academic interests.
RBI Governor D Subbarao had then decided to keep some of Mohan’s portfolios, such as the monetary policy department and department of economic analysis and policy, with himself. Gokarn, who took charge as deputy governor of RBI in November, was given the portfolios Mohan was handling.
RBI has four deputy governors, of which two are promoted from within the bank. Of the remaining two, one comes from a commercial bank and the other is an economist. Chakrabarty is the commercial banker who headed Indian Bank and Punjab National Bank before joining the central bank in June 2009.