Rajan, the only central bank governor in two decades who did not get a second term, also seemed to defend his controversial remark of India being a 'one-eyed king in the land of blind', saying GDP expansion slipped in every quarter since that remark in April of last year.
Breaking his silence after completion of the unwritten one-year moratorium for not commenting on India-specific issues since his exit from RBI on September 4, 2016, Rajan said India has a lot of potential and is capable of doing significantly more but should not get complacent.
"Let us be confident, we can do it. Let us do it. But let us boast only after we have achieved it. Let us not be overly complacent before that," he said at an event here to launch his book.
Rajan said he faced awkward questions in Beijing recently on India lagging behind China in terms of GDP growth rate for the second quarter in a row.
Also Read
Replying to a question on demonetisation, Rajan said "the jury in terms of data is still out".
He, however, said the cost of demonetisation has been quite substantial.
"What (the impact) is because of demonetisation, what is because of banking sector stress, what is because of anticipation of GST...All three are happening at the same time. So I don't think you can pinpoint and say exactly this much but analysts have made an estimate -- 1 per cent and 2 per cent of GDP in terms of the growth cost," said the former RBI Governor.
"I had very cordial relations with both the governments, kept them informed and essentially had government support all along the way," he added.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content