"Given our fiscal deficit, given our Current Account Deficit, there will be some pressure on rupee and rupee will indeed depreciate. All that we are saying is that we cannot allow the rupee to go into a free fall. We are arguing for a stable rupee", he said while replying to a discussion on the state of economy in the Rajya Sabha.
The Minister also made a strong case for promoting foreign investment to bridge the CAD, which had touched the historic high of 4.8 per cent of the GDP in 2012-13 and is responsible for declining rupee.
However, controlling inflation cannot be the only mandate of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), he said and advised the central bank to view it as "part of a larger mandate (of promoting) growth and employment."
RBI under its present Governor D Subbarao had laid more emphasis on combating inflation and resisted pressure to ease monetary policy to promote growth.
Stressing on the government's commitment to check widening CAD, the Minister said, "we will leave no stone unturned to contain CAD at USD 70 billion (in current fiscal) and add to the foreign exchange reserves...As fiscal deficit is a red line, the CAD is also a line and every endeavour will be made not to breach that line.