Twitter
Advertisement

Finance minister, RBI governor talk business after public outbursts

FM, RBI governor discussing liquidity crunch, take stock of financial sector, economy, but skip contentious issue

Latest News
article-main
Arun Jaitley and (right) Urjit Patel
FacebookTwitterWhatsappLinkedin

Amid a growing rift between the central bank and the government, the Financial Stability and Development Council (FSDC) chaired by finance minister Arun Jaitley met in the national capital on Tuesday to discuss the liquidity issues faced by the financial sector.

The meeting was attended by Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Urjit Patel among heads of regulators that included Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (Irdai), Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) and Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI). All eyes were on the meeting where the finance minister and the RBI governor came face to face first time after deputy governor Viral Acharya raised the issue regarding the independence of the central bank.

The tension between the government and the central bank have risen in the last few days. Earlier in the day, Jaitley slammed RBI for failing to prevent indiscriminate lending, saying that the central bank looked the other way when banks gave loans indiscriminately during 2008 to 2014.

The liquidity crunch caused by defaults by Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services (IL&FS) Group came up for discussion during the FSDC meeting. The finance ministry raised concerns about the impact of the debt default crisis at IL&FS spilling over to other non-banking finance companies (NBFCs).

Responding to the government's concerns about liquidity crunch and its impact on the economy, RBI governor reportedly told the Council that there was no liquidity crunch in the NBFCs except in the housing finance sector. "He assured the government that the central bank was keeping a close watch on the situation and will ensure adequate liquidity in the system," a senior finance ministry official said.

"The meeting focused on the liquidity issues in the NBFC sector. The government asked RBI to ensure that the situation in the NBFC sector does not worsen. The banking regulator assured that there were no signs of stress in the NBFC sector at large and it was keeping a close watch," sources said.

Apart from the liquidity position in the NBFC and mutual fund sector, the Council also discussed at length the issue of interest rates, the finance ministry said. Jaitley reviewed the current economic situation as well as financial sector performance. Sources said that the government raised the issue of high interest rate impacting industries. "RBI responded by saying that the central bank's stance has helped it in containing inflation. RBI said that the funds were available and there was no policy tightening from their end," sources said.

FSDC also took note of the developments regarding strengthening of Cyber Security in Financial Sector including progress made towards setting up of a Computer Emergency Response Team in the Financial Sector (CERT-Fin) under a Statutory Framework. The Council also deliberated on the need for identifying and securing critical information infrastructure in the financial sector. It also looked into the issues and challenges of cryptocurrency. It was briefed about the deliberations in the high-level committee chaired by the economic affairs secretary to devise an appropriate legal framework to ban the use of private cryptocurrencies in India and encouraging the use of the Distributed Ledger Technology, as announced in the Budget.

Other issues discussed include market developments and financial stability implications of the use of RegTech and SupTech by financial firms and regulatory and supervisory authorities, and implementing the recommendations of the Sumit Bose Committee report on measures, such as, promoting appropriate disclosure regime for financial distribution costs.

THE FACE-OFF

Govt

  • The government wants some of the Reserve Bank of India restrictions on lending to be eased
     
  • Government officials, power sector have been lobbying the central bank to ease NPA rules
     
  • RBI should part with most, if not all, of its profit as dividend
     
  • The chief economic advisor had criticised forecasting errors by the inflation-targeting central bank

RBI

  • In an attempt to clean up the banking system, the RBI ring-fenced weak state-run banks
     
  • RBI new rules force lenders to declare a delinquent borrower even if payments were overdue by a day
     
  • RBI is against giving most of its profit as dividend
     
  • The central bank is against plan to create a separate payments regulator
Find your daily dose of news & explainers in your WhatsApp. Stay updated, Stay informed-  Follow DNA on WhatsApp.
Advertisement

Live tv

Advertisement
Advertisement