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RBI cannot always agree with Finance Ministry, says former Governor YV Reddy

"If the RBI always agrees with Finance Ministry, it is superfluous. And if it doesn't, then it is obnoxious. So tensions will have to be accepted," Reddy said.

India TV Business Desk India TV Business Desk New Delhi Published on: June 08, 2017 23:25 IST
YV Reddy
Former RBI Governor YV Reddy

Former RBI Governor Y Venugopal Reddy today  said that it was natural for the RBI and Finance Ministry to disagree at times.

He further said that  the tensions were systemic in nature and should be accepted.

"If the RBI always agrees with Finance Ministry, it is superfluous. And if it doesn't, then it is obnoxious. So tensions will have to be accepted," Reddy told media persons.

The strained relationship between the two entities became evident when RBI Governor Urjit Patel revealed on Wednesday that the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) members had turned down the Finance Ministry's invitation for a discussion ahead of the policy review. 

"Regarding the Finance Ministry's invitation for a meeting with the MPC... all the MPC members declined the request of the Finance Ministry," Patel had told reporters here following the announcement of the second bi-monthly monetary policy review of the fiscal.

Patel was asked if the ministry invite was an assault on the independence and autonomy of the RBI. 

Not specifying when the invite had come from the Finance Ministry, he said the committee did not accept the invitation.

Since the six-member MPC started setting rates in October last year, this was the first time it did not take a unanimous decision, with five members voting in favour of holding the rate and one opposing.

Three of the six members of the MPC are government nominees, while the others are from the RBI.

Government sources said that there is unhappiness in official circles about the way the MPC has resisted relaxing rates for a period that has extended over six months now.

The change in the RBI's monetary policy stance from "accommodative" to "neutral" made at the February review is also being regarded in official circles as a hardening of the apex bank's conservative and risk-averse approach.

(With IANS inputs)

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