The Hindu Newspaper Editorial Vocabulary : 02 November 2018 -For Various Competitive Exams |
Always a fine balance
The RBI-government tussle must prompt a debate on defining the RBI Governor’s position
Yaga Venugopal Reddy, a former
Governor of the Reserve Bank of India, (RBI) known as much for his wit as his
clever stewardship
of the central bank, coined an
interesting phrase, “open-mouth operation”, taking off from the Open Market
Operation tool of the RBI.
That phrase best describes RBI
Deputy Governor Viral Acharya’s A.D. Shroff Memorial Lecture in Mumbai last
week. Dr. Reddy had coined the phrase to describe his speech in Goa on August
15, 1997 at a conference of the Foreign Exchange Dealers’ Association. Then a
Deputy Governor, Dr. Reddy (with the full support of the then Governor, C.
Rangarajan) tried to talk down the rupee which the central bank
felt was over-valued.
Compelling correctives
The objective of an “open-mouth
operation” is clear: influence a target audience to behave in a manner
favourable to you or your objectives. If the target was the forex market in Dr.
Reddy’s Goa speech, it was the Central government in Dr.
Acharya’s speech. The “open-mouth operation” worked beautifully in both
instances. The rupee corrected immediately after Dr. Reddy’s speech; after Dr.
Acharya’s speech, the government has been forced to acknowledge, even if grudgingly,
that the RBI’s autonomy is “within the framework of the RBI Act”.
Shorn of the personalities, what
we are witnessing
now is a fascinating tussle between an institution covered by an
Act of Parliament and the executive, with one fighting for its autonomy and the
other for its interests. Where does the fair balance lie?
Before trying to answer that
question, we need to understand the ‘autonomy’ that the RBI enjoys and the
limits to that. This is not the first time that the RBI’s autonomy has come
under focus, and it will surely not be the last. Successive Governors have
fought against what they felt were transgressions — formal and informal — on the
central bank’s autonomy by powerful Finance Ministers.
Dr. Reddy once famously quipped
to a journalist: “I’m very independent. The RBI has
full autonomy. I
have taken the permission of my Finance Minster to tell you that.” On a more
serious note, he clarified that the RBI is independent, but within the limits
set by the government.
In his book, Advice and Dissent:
My Life in Public Service, he explains his understanding of this autonomy
under three functions: operational issues, policy matters, and structural
reforms. In the case of the first, he believed in total freedom; on the second,
he preferred prior consultation with the mandarins in North Block; and on the third, he
worked in “very close coordination” with the government.
Dr. Reddy describes the interactions
with the government as “walking on a razor’s edge” and concedes
that the sovereign is ultimately supreme. That is because the RBI Act allows
the government to give written directives to the RBI in the public interest
(the infamous Section 7 that is now in the news). On critical issues, often the
choice for the Governor is to concede to the government with or without a
written directive. But tradition has been that both the government and the RBI have
avoided
recourse to this provision.
That has been due only to the mature
handling of differences behind closed doors, something that has been
absent in the current tussle. Duvvuri Subbarao, another former Governor, argues
along similar lines in his book, Who Moved My Interest Rate?
Handled with care, till now
The existence of Section 7 in the
RBI Act, even if it has never been used till now, proves that the RBI is not
fully autonomous, says Dr. Subbarao. He points out that the fact that it has
never been used is testimony to the sense of responsibility that the government
and the central bank have displayed.
The statement put out by the
government on Wednesday underlines this message very clearly: the RBI
is autonomous but within the framework of the RBI Act. It is thus clear that
the central bank cannot claim absolute autonomy. It is autonomy within the
limits set by the government and its extent depends on the subject and the
context. There is a clear reason why, even while it is conceded that control of
the nation’s currency should be with an independent authority removed from the sway
of elected representatives, the RBI Act has the veto option in the form of
Section 7.
And that’s because it is not the
technocrats and economists sitting in Mumbai’s Mint Street who carry the can for
the policies they frame; it is the rulers in Delhi who do. Ultimately, it is
the elected representative ruling the country who is answerable to the citizen
every five years. The representative cannot split hairs before the voter
while explaining the economy’s performance — he has to own up for everything, including
the RBI’s actions, as his own.
In a democracy, it is unthinkable
that we will have an institution that is so autonomous that it is not
answerable to the people. The risk of such an institution is that it will
impose its preferences on society against the latter’s will, which is
undemocratic.
Seen from this perspective, the
limits to the RBI’s autonomy will be clear. It is autonomous and accountable to
the people ultimately, through the government. The onus is thus on responsible
behaviour by both sides. There is enough creative tension between the two built
into the system. The Governor has to be conscious of the limits to his autonomy
at all times, and the government has to consider the advice coming from Mint
Street in all seriousness, as indeed Dr. Reddy and Dr. Subbarao have pointed
out.
Government’s failure
But what if they do have fundamental
disagreements, as they seem to be having now, and are unable to arrive at a
common ground? Well, the brahmastra of Section 7 is certainly available
to the more powerful side; but just as the weapon is a deterrent never to be used, so
is Section 7. The cleverness of the politician in Delhi lies in negotiating
with the RBI and having his way without ever threatening to unleash
the brahmastra — the other side knows it exists anyway. This is where
the present dispensation
in Delhi seems to have failed.
It is to avoid situations such as
the one we are seeing now that former RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan argued for a
clear enunciation
of the RBI’s responsibilities. In his book I Do What I Do, he
points out that the position of the RBI Governor in the government hierarchy is
not defined. The Governor draws the salary of a Cabinet Secretary, and it is
generally understood that he will explain his decisions only to the Prime
Minister and the Finance Minister. Argues Dr. Rajan: “There is a danger in
keeping the position ill-defined because the constant effort of the bureaucracy
is to whittle
down
its power.”
The latest tussle between the
executive and the central bank will eventually end, in all probability with a
compromise. However, it’s purpose would have been served if the debate leads to
greater awareness on both sides of the other’s compulsions. Better still, if it
leads to a clear definition of the RBI’s responsibilities that would, to borrow
Governor Urjit Patel’s words, be the pot of nectar coming out of this Samudra
Manthan.
Courtesy: The Hindu
1.
Stewardship (noun) - it is a set of principles that
forms the responsible planning and management of
resources. Stewardship can be applied to the environment and nature,
health, technology, economics and etc
2. Talk down (phrasal verb) - make something less
interesting/attractive
3. Grudgingly (adverb)
- in a reluctant manner or in
a resentful manner.
4. Shorn (verb) – (past participle of Shear), cut off,
break off
5. Wit (noun) - intelligence, cleverness, understanding
6. Tussle (noun) - scuffle, argument, quarrel
7. Transgressions (noun)
- breach, violation,
defiance
8. Quipped (verb)
- joke, jest, banter.
9. Mandarins (noun) - a powerful
officer, civil servant, functionary/bureaucrat.
10. Walking on a razor’s edge (phrase) - in a dangerous position
11. Concedes (verb) - admit,
acknowledge, accept,/allow
12. Recourse (noun) - option,
choice, possibility/way out
13. Behind closed doors (phrase) - covertly, in
secret, in private
14. Underlines (verb) - emphasize, underscore, highlight
15. Carry the can (phrase) - take responsibility for a
mistake/wrong thing happened.
16. Own up (phrasal verb)
- confess, admit to, accept responsibility
17. split hairs (phrase) - quibble,
raise trivial objections, find fault; argue over nothing.
18. Onus (noun) - responsibility, duty, burden
19. Deterrent (noun) - disincentive, discouragement, dissuasion
20. Nectar (noun) - amrita
for immortality; the (delicious) drink of the gods
21. Hierarchy (noun) - reduce, cut down, decrease
22. Whittle down (phrasal verb) - reduce, cut down, decrease
23. Enunciation (noun) - expression, declaration, articulation/pronouncement
24. Unleash (verb) - let
loose, release, set free
25. Dispensation (noun) - system,
arrangement, organization
Note: All
meanings took from Oxforddictionaries.com
and Google.com only
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