Friday, March 29, 2024
HomeUncategorizedChidambaram, Pranab interfered in the functioning of central bank: Ex RBI Governor

Chidambaram, Pranab interfered in the functioning of central bank: Ex RBI Governor

- Advertisement -

In scathing comments on his bosses in North Block, former RBI governor Duvvuri Subbarao has alleged that ex-finance ministers P Chidambaram and Pranab Mukherjee interfered in the functioning of the central bank, especially on setting interest rates, and the differences even led to two of his deputies not getting extensions.

Duvvuri Subbarao-AV
“Both Chidambaram and Pranab Mukherjee were piqued by the Reserve Bank’s tight interest rate policy on the ground that high interest rates were inhibiting investment and hurting growth,” writes Subbarao, who manned the Mint Road during the global financial crisis and had a five-year tenure from September 5, 2008 to September 4, 2013.

The comments in the ‘Who Moved My Interest Rates’- Leading the Reserve Bank of India through Five Turbulent Years, a tell-tale memoir running into 352 pages and hitting the stands today, come within a month of present RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan refusing to accept a second term, apparently upset by the personal criticism levelled against him.

The book narrates how Chidambaram and Mukherjee, as finance ministers during his term at the central bank, often made public their differences with the RBI on decisions on policy rates.

According to Subbarao, who led the RBI through five turbulent years since the fall of the Lehman Brothers, there was not only pressure on him from Chidambaram and Mukherjee to cut interest rates, but his refusal to do so cost him dearly.

“I have been asked several times if there was pressure from the government on setting interest rates. There certainly was, although the precise psychological mechanics of pressure would vary depending on the context, setting and personalities,” he has written in the book.

He goes onto say that he had to pay the price for not falling in line as the government turned down Subbarao’s recommendations to give extension to two of his deputy governors–Usha Thorat during Mukherjee’s tenure and Subir Gokarn when Chidambaram returned to the finance ministry.

Subbarao recalls that throughout his five-year term, the government was very uncomfortable with the RBI for raising interest rates and blamed this for falling growth rates.

“The logic of why the Reserve Bank should compromise its judgement so as to become a cheerleader for the economy never appealed to me,” he writes.

The former bureaucrat-turned-central bank Governor also suggests that Chidambaram had broken a tacit agreement between the government and the RBI to keep such differences behind closed doors and painfully recalls how the then FM rebuked him publicly.

In October 2012, after he left the policy rate unchanged, Chidambaram unveiled a fiscal road map just before the RBI policy meeting.

Soon after the RBI’s policy statement, Chidambaram said: “Growth is as much a concern as inflation. If the government has to walk alone to face the challenge of growth, we will walk alone.”

Not just that, Subbarao recalls, in the chapter titled ‘Walking Alone’, less than a week after this statement they were together in Mexico for the dinner hosted by the Indian ambassador on the sidelines of the G20 meeting and Chidambaram “greeted everyone, but pointedly ignored me all through the evening, leaving me with an uncomfortable feeling”.

Chidambaram went further and threatened to “walk alone” to “face the challenge of growth” if the central bank did not realise the importance of growth.

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

Latest

Must Read

- Advertisement -

Related News