Govt denies seeking huge capital transfer from RBI

The government has said it is discussing an “appropriate” size of capital reserves that the central bank must maintain but denied seeking a massive capital transfer from the Reserve Bank.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has a massive Rs 9.59 lakh crore reserves and the government, if reports are to be believed, wants the central bank to part with a third of that fund — an issue which along with easing of norms for weak banks and raising liquidity has brought the two at loggerheads in recent weeks, media reports said.

Economic Affairs Secretary Subhash Chandra Garg took to the twitter to clarify that the government wasn’t in any dire needs of funds and that there was no proposal to ask the RBI to transfer Rs 3.6 lakh crore, reported PTI.

See also  BSNL signs pacts with Facebook, MobiKwik

The government, he reportedly said, is on track to meet the fiscal deficit target of 3.1 per cent for the financial year 2018-19.

“There is no proposal to ask RBI to transfer (Rs) 3.6 or (Rs) 1 lakh crore, as speculated,” he tweeted. “Government’s FD (fiscal deficit) in FY 2013-14 was 5.1%. From 2014-15 onwards, Government has succeeded in bringing it down substantially. We will end the FY 2018-19 with FD of 3.3%. Government has actually foregone (Rs) 70,000 crore of budgeted market borrowing this year.”

See also  Sensex gains 152 points to hit 32k on festive week

Garg was quoted as saying that the only proposal “under discussion is to fix appropriate economic capital framework of RBI”.

Economic capital framework refers to the risk capital required by the central bank while taking into account different risks, the PTI report pointed out.

Former Chief Economic Adviser Arvind Subramanian had in Economic Survey 2016-17 said the RBI was already exceptionally highly capitalised and nearly Rs 4 lakh crore of its capital transfer to the government can be used for recapitalising the banks and/or recapitalising a Public Sector Asset Rehabilitation Agency, the report said, adding that the proposal never saw the light of the day.

See also  India's World Bank ranking has improved: Sitharaman

Author

Related Posts

About The Author

Contact Us