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Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has said that the Indian public sector banks had their "worst phase" under the combination of former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and ex-RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan.
"I do respect Raghuram Rajan as a great scholar who chose to be in the central bank in India at a time when the Indian economy was all buoyant," Sitharaman said, during the lecture organised by the Deepak and Neera Raj Centre on Indian Economic Policies of the Columbia University.
Sitharaman was asked about Rajan's comments in a recent lecture at Brown University, in which he had apparently stated that the Narendra Modi government in its first time had not done better on the economy because the administration was extremely centralised and the leadership did not appear to have a consistent articulated vision on how to achieve economic growth. The minister responded saying that there were major issues with bank loans during Rajan's tenure as the central bank head.
"Dr Singh was the Prime Minister and I'm sure Dr Rajan will agree that Dr Singh would have had a ‘consistent articulated vision' for India,” she said amid laughter from the audience.
"With due respect, I'm not making fun of anybody but I certainly want to put this forward for a comment which has come like this. I have no reason to doubt that Rajan feels for every word of what he is saying,” she added.
Sitharaman said while she is grateful that Rajan did an asset quality review, people should know what made the banks reach this ailing state.
"I am grateful that Rajan did an asset quality review but I'm sorry, can all of us put together also think of asking what ails our banks today? Where has it been inherited from?" she asked.
Sitharaman said, "While economists can take a view of what prevails today or prevailed years ago, I will also want answers for the time when Rajan was in the Governor's post speaking about the Indian banks, for which today, to give a lifeline is the primary duty of the Finance Minister of India [sic]. And the lifeline kind of an emergency has not come overnight.”
Responding to a question, Sitharaman further pointed out that if there is a feeling that there's been centralised now, then,
"You need to have a country as diverse as India with an effective leadership. A rather too democratic leadership, which probably will have the approval of quite a lot of liberals, I'm afraid, left behind such a nasty stink of corruption, which we are cleaning up even today," she said.
(Published in an arrangement with PTI)
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