All Indians Should Be Concerned: Raghuram Rajan on RBI Guv’s Exit

During his tenure, Rajan had differences with the government and did not get an extension.

PTI
India
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File image of former RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan and Urjit Patel. Patel resigned as the RBI Governor on Monday, 10 December. 
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File image of former RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan and Urjit Patel. Patel resigned as the RBI Governor on Monday, 10 December. 
(Photo: The Quint)

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With RBI Governor Urjit Patel putting in his papers, his immediate predecessor Raghuram Rajan on Monday, 10 December, said "all Indians" should be concerned as strength of institutions is important for growth and development.

Patel, who faced the possibility of an unprecedented action from the government over differences on a variety of issues, resigned from his job, citing personal reasons.

“I think Dr Patel has made a statement and I think this is the ultimate statement that a regulator or a civil servant can make. I think the statement should be respected,” Rajan told news channel ET Now.

"We should" go into the details as to why there was impasse, which forced this ultimate decision, he noted.

During his tenure, Rajan had differences with the government and did not get an extension.

"I think, this is something that all Indians should be concerned about because strength of our institutions is really important for our growth, sustainable growth and equity in the economy," said Rajan, who completed his three-year term as RBI Governor in September 2016.

‘Extreme Change in RBI’s Governance’

With regard to powers of the RBI Board, Rajan said there is "an extreme" change in the nature of the governance of the Reserve Bank of India for the "board to become an operational board, that is to make operational decisions".

Earlier, the board was an advisory and the professionals from the central bank took decisions, Rajan said, apparently referring to recent appointments of RSS ideologue S Gurumurthy and cooperative banking sector expert SK Marathe to the board.

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"I think, the move towards giving the board more operational authority would impinge on the professional management to regulate and supervise (the bank)... and if that is to be the case then the board should be composed of professionals, as opposed to the larger public," Rajan opined.

Patel's resignation was being speculated right from the time the government cited a never-before-used provision of the RBI Act to get him to consider its views on relaxing lending norms for segments such as small and medium enterprises, appropriate size of reserves the central bank must maintain and easing norms for weak banks.

Patel, 55, who took over as the 24th Governor of the central bank on 5 September, 2016, had the shortest tenure since 1992.

(Published in arrangement with PTI)

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