"I don't understand this discussion on CRR or the cash reserve ratio that sometimes comes up...This is a question that some bankers raise occasionally, saying cut CRR. I think it should be recognised that CRR is primarily a monetary instrument," Rajan told analysts and researchers at a post-policy con-call.
It can be recalled that Rajan had in April termed the demand for CRR cut as "irrelevant". Even after this, Indian Banks Association (IBA) Chairman and head of state-run Indian Bank T M Bhasin had called for a CRR cut.
The Governor added that the mandatory cash reserve ratio (CRR), under which the banks have to park 4 per cent of their deposits with the RBI as a mandatory solvency measure, will continue to fetch no interest for them.
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In the run-up to the policy announcement, Bhasin had opined that cutting CRR in an excess liquidity environment like the current one would be a wiser choice for RBI.
"We have surplus liquidity in the system as there has not been much credit offtake so repo window does not give banks any advantage as we don't borrow from banks at this point. So, the CRR window helps us bring down cost of funds.
"We expect and will request 0.5 per cent cut in CRR which would release about Rs 40,000 crore in the system," Bhasin said. He repeated the same in a statement in his reaction to the policy today.
SBI had been repeatedly lobbying for a CRR cut and there was a very strong exchange of words between the past SBI chairman Pratip Chaudhuri and the former RBI deputy governor K C Chakrabarty regarding the same. Chaudhuri had even demanded abolition of the CRR terming it as dead money.