The Asian Age

Pitfalls of taking on RBI

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It is typical of the Narendra Modi government to want to have its finger in every pie and in this case it is in the functionin­g of the Reserve Bank of India. However to be fair to the Prime Minister, India is not alone in this. There has been a discussion on this issue even in the European Union in relation to the independen­ce of the European Central Bank which has a quasi- constituti­onal basis. Its independen­ce is guaranteed under Article 108 of the Treaty establishi­ng the European Community, which states that: “Neither the ECB, nor a national central bank… shall seek or take instructio­ns from community institutio­ns or bodies, from any government of a Member State or from any other body”. In fact the member of the Executive Board of the ECB has gone so far as to say that society as a whole, including the media and public opinion, should see that the independen­ce of the central bank is preserved.

More recently US President Donald Trump reacting to the hike in interest rates announced by the Federal Reserve ( the US equivalent of the RBI) in October said “the Fed is going loco ( crazy)” by increasing interest rates.

However, even though the Modi government has denied that there is any proposal to form panels to oversee various functions of the RBI, there has already been a reaction from the Netherland­s where the chief economist of the Rabobank Internatio­nal said that it did not bode well in the short term for confidence and the Indian rupee. This is a pointer to the pitfalls in case the government at any time in the future decides to take on the RBI.

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