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Dynamism in Reserve Bank of India policies in past 2 decades,
is this sufficient?
Department of management studies, IIT Roorkee
12 Oct, 2010
Abhishek
Laxmi Narasimha Boddu
Udit Gupta
Vema Jagdish
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1. Abstract:With economy opened up in 1991, the central banks role has become even more crucial in the
economy. At this power Reserve Bank of India has been very dynamic and has received various
accolades in this front of controlling Indian economy. But are these measures taking away
autonomy from financial institutions. Is it making innovation in financial economics suffocated?How stringent policies are? The paper will be discussing about major moves in monetary policy
and towards financial stability.
2. Introduction:Indias central bank, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), has an unenviable task. It is not really
independent, it has multiple objectives (not all of its own making), it has to deal with a country
that is extremely heterogeneous in terms of economic structures and development levels, and it
often lacks good data for its decision-making. In the circumstances, one might agree with senior
RBI officials who argue that it does a good job under the circumstances, especially in helping to
keep Indias financial house in order and externally-generated crises at bay. Others, outside the
RBI, have pressed for greater simplicity, transparency and predictability in the RBIs
functioning. Critics have argued that the RBIs monetary policy in recent times has been
inconsistent and, thus, a source of some confusion to observers and market participants. More
specifically, the RBI remains very elusive as to what is being targeted and how the target is being
attained. Rather, the RBIs monetary policy framework has been based on a rather ad hoc
combination of sterilized foreign exchange intervention (via Monetary Stabilization Scheme
(MSS) bonds), interest rate changes along with nonmarket mechanism (hikes in the cash reserveratio (CRR), ad hoc capital controls etc).
3. RBI Monetary policy1,43.1Objectives of monetary policyCentral banks derive their objectives from their respective mandates. Monetary policy could
have either a single objective of price stability or multiple objectives besides price stability. In
the literature and in practice, price stability is considered as the dominant objective of monetarypolicy. The preamble to the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 delineates the basic functions of the
Bank as to regulate the issue of Bank notes and keeping of reserves with a view to securing
monetary stability in India and generally to operate the currency and credit system of the country
to its advantage. The objectives of monetary policy evolved from this broad guideline as
maintaining price stability and ensuring adequate flow of credit to the productive sectors of the
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economy. In practice, monetary policy endeavored to maintain a judicious balance between
economic growth and price stability.
The question is how do we define price stability? Price stability does not mean zero inflation. It
is considered as a low and stable order of inflation. This is because both high inflation and
deflation impose costs on the economy by way of loss of output and misallocation of resources.For advanced economies, an inflation rate of about 2 per cent is equated with price stability. For
an emerging market economy(EME) like India, going through significant structural changes, a
slightly higher rate of inflation which allows relative prices to adjust smoothly can be considered
appropriate. The Chakravarty Committee (1985) had defined an inflation rate of 4 per cent per
annum as tolerable for India.
India is considered to be a moderate inflation country with the long-term average inflation rate
remaining in a single digit of about 7.5 per cent since 197071. Over this 40-year period, the
average inflation rate, however, has decelerated to about 5.5 per cent in the decade of 2000s. The
medium term objective of monetary policy is to bring down the average inflation rate to around3.0 per cent consistent with Indias integration with the global economy. While a low level of
inflation is essential to sustain high levels of growth, it is not sufficient to maintain financial
stability, as has been demonstrated by the recent global financial crisis. Consequently, besides
price stability, ensuring orderly conditions of financial markets has become a key policy concern.
In this context, it may be indicated that financial stability had emerged as another important
objective of monetary policy in India much before the crisis. Thus, monetary policy in India has
evolved to have multiple objectives of price stability, financial stability and growth. These
objectives are not inherently contradictory, rather mutually reinforcing. Price and financial
stability are important for sustaining high levels of growth which is the ultimate objective of
public policy.
3.2Evolution of monetary policy framework3.2.1 Monetary framework before liberalization
In India also, monetary policy framework has undergone significant transformation over time. In
the 1960s, as inflation was considered to be structural and inflation volatility was mainly caused
by agricultural failures, there was greater reliance on selective credit controls. The aim was to
regulate bank advances to sensitive commodities to influence production outlays, on the one
hand and to limit possibilities of speculation, on the other. In the 1970s, there was a surge in
inflation on account of monetary expansion induced by expansionary fiscal policies besides the
oil price shocks. By the early 1980s, there was a broad agreement on the primary causes of
inflation. It was argued that while fluctuations in agricultural prices and oil price shocks did
affect prices, sustained inflation since the early 1960s could not have occurred unless it was
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supported by the continuous excessive monetary expansion generated by the large-scale
monetization of the fiscal deficit3.
Against the backdrop, the Committee to Review the Working of the Monetary System
(Chairman: Prof. Sukhamoy Chakravarty;1985), set up by the Reserve Bank of India,
recommended a monetary targeting framework to target an acceptable order of inflation in linewith desired output growth. It also recommended for limiting monetary expansion through the
process of monetization of fiscal deficit by an agreement between the Reserve Bank and the
Government. With empirical evidence supporting reasonable stability in the demand function for
money, broad money (M3) formally emerged as an intermediate target. Under this approach, a
monetary projection is made consistent with the expected real GDP growth and a tolerable level
of inflation. The framework was, however, a flexible one allowing for various feedback effects.
Moreover, money supply target was relatively well understood by the public at large.
3.3.2 Monetary framework after liberalization
3.3.2.1 Monetary targeted approach
After the liberalization, the pace of trade and financial liberalization gaining momentum
following the initiation of structural reforms in the early 1990s, the efficacy of broad money as
an intermediate target of monetary policy came under question. The Reserve Banks Monetary
and Credit Policy for the First Half of 199899 observed that financial innovations emerging in
the economy provided some evidence that the dominant effect on the demand for money in the
near future need not necessarily be real income, as in the past.
Since the mid-1990s, apart from dealing with the usual supply shocks, monetary policy had to
increasingly contend with external shocks emanating from swings in capital flows, volatility in
the exchange rate and global business cycles. Subsequently, increase in liquidity emanating
from capital inflows raised the ratio of net foreign assets (NFA) to Reserve Money (Chart 1).
This rendered the control of monetary aggregates more difficult. Consequently, there was also
increasing evidence of changes in the underlying transmission mechanism of monetary policy
with interest rate and the exchange rate gaining importance vis--vis quantity variables. Bank
credit to private sector as a per cent of GDP also started rising, though it still remains low as
compared to advanced economies and many EMEs underscoring the potential for greater credit
penetration (Table1). These developments necessitated refinements in the conduct of monetary
policy.
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3.3.2.2 Multiple indicator approach
The Reserve Bank formally adopted a multiple indicators approach in April 1998 with a
greater emphasis on rate channels for monetary policy formulation. As a part of this approach,
information content from a host of quantity variables such as money, credit, output, trade, capital
flows and fiscal position as well as from rate variables such as rates of return in differentmarkets, inflation rate and exchange rate are analyzed for drawing monetary policy perspectives.
The multiple-indicators approach, as conceptualized when Dr. Bimal Jalan was the Governor,
continued to evolve and was augmented by forward looking indicators and a panel of
parsimonious time series models. The forward looking indicators are drawn from the Reserve
Banks industrial outlook survey, capacity utilization survey, professional forecasters survey
and inflation expectations survey.
The assessment from these indicators and models feed into the projection of growth and
inflation. Simultaneously, the Reserve Bank also gives the projection for broad money (M3),
which serves as an important information variable, so as to make the resource balance in theeconomy consistent with the credit needs of the government and the private sector. Thus, the
current framework of monetary policy can be termed as an augmented multiple indicators
approach as illustrated below (Exhibit1).
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This large panel of indicators is at times criticized as a check list approach, as it does not
provide for a clearly defined nominal anchor for monetary policy. However, given the level of
financial market development, the evolving nature of monetary transmission and the need to
maintain the resource balance between the government and the private sector, monetary policy
assessment becomes inherently complex.
Globally, it is now recognized that the task of monetary management has become more
challenging. In view of central banks operating in an environment of high uncertainty regarding
the functioning of the economy as well as its prevailing state and future developments, a single
model or a limited set of indicators may not be a sufficient guide for monetary policy. Instead, an
encompassing and integrated set of data is required. This reinforces the usefulness of monitoring
a number of macroeconomic indicators in the conduct of monetary policy. In the context of the
recent crisis, it is argued that monitoring money and credit may help policymakers interpret asset
market developments and draw implications from them for the economic and financial outlook.
There is a need to raise awareness in the central banking community of the importance of
monetary analysis and its implications, both for economies individually and globally. Thus, there
is now increasing support for a broad-based approach to monetary policy.
4. Working of multiple indicator approachThe process of financial liberalization and deregulation of interest rates introduced since the
early 1990s enhanced the role of market forces in the determination of interest rates and the
exchange rate. Accordingly, the Reserve Bank of India placed greater emphasis on the money
market as the focal point for the conduct of monetary policy and for fostering its integration withother market segments. Following the Narsimham Committee (1998) recommendations, the
Reserve Bank introduced the liquidity adjustment facility (LAF) in June 2000 to manage market
liquidity on a daily basis and also to transmit interest rate signals to the market. Collateralized
borrowing and lending operations (CBLO) was introduced as a new money market instrument in
January 2003. The call money market was transformed into a pure inter-bank market by August
2005 in a phased manner.
As a result, the money market developed significantly over the years as reflected in increased
turnover in various market segments (Table 2). Along with developing money markets, the
Reserve Bank has also undertaken various measures to develop the government securities andforeign exchange market, increasing the depth of the financial markets (Chart 2).
All these reforms have also led to improvements in liquidity management operations by the
Reserve Bank of India as reflected in general containment of call rates within the LAF corridor
except occasional volatility. Apart from imparting stability in call money rates, this has also
resulted in greater market integration as reflected in close co-movement of rates in various
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segments of the money market (Chart3). The rule-based fiscal policy pursued under the Financial
Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act, by easing fiscal dominance, contributed to
overall improvement in monetary management.
During the recent period, the issue of managing large and persistent capital inflows in excess of
the absorptive capacity of the economy added another dimension to the liquidity managementoperations. Initially, the liquidity impact of large capital inflows were sterilized through open
market operation (OMO) sales and LAF operations. Given the finite stock of government
securities in the Reserve Banks portfolio and the legal restrictions on issuance of its own paper,
additional instruments other than LAF were needed to contain liquidity of a more enduring
nature. This led to the introduction of the market stabilization scheme (MSS) in April 2004.
Under this scheme, short term government securities were issued but the amount remained
impounded in the Reserve Banks balance sheet for sterilization purposes. Interestingly, in the
face of reversal of capital flows during the recent crisis, unwinding of such sterilized liquidity
under the MSS helped to ease liquidity conditions (Chart4).
The efficient conduct of monetary policy is judged ultimately in terms of its ability to stabilize
real economic activity and inflation and also ensuring financial stability consistent with the
policy objectives. An assessment of the multiple indicators approach for the period 199899 to
200809 reveals that actual outcome of GDP growth has been generally higher than the
projections indicated in the monetary policy statements, while it has generally been lower in case
of inflation (Table 3).
5.
Drawbacks in Monetary policy framework
6
WPI - In India the WPI, calculated by Office of the Economic Adviser, is a weekly index. It is
neither the international equivalent of the producers price index nor the consumer price index.
This technically makes Indias inflation measure incomparable with the rest of the world. The
various retail measures of inflation are of extremely poor quality. Besides, the four retail
measures CPI for rural laborers, agricultural laborers, industrial workers and urban non-
manual employees are too narrowly targeted, making them irrelevant for macro policy
formulation. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) should be particularly worried about price
measures and the large divergence between the WPI and consumer price index in reference to its
monetary policy stance.[Source: economic times, 28
th
September, 2010]
IIP Construction of the IIP involves identifying important units that account for a large (70 %)
share of overall production to get a fair representation of growth. This process has two inherent
problems; the first one is the fixed base index, which does not account for changing production
pattern in the economy. Therefore, as we move further away from the base year, the index
becomes less and less representative of the actual production in the economy. The second
problem is in the way the data is collected. As data is collected from units, which have an
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important value in production, these units are generally large in size. This is most true for the
capital goods industry in which a few industries account for a major share in production, as the
production process is capital intensive and enjoy economies of scale. Volatility has been built
into the way IIP is constructed. The source of volatility can be traced to the way orders are
booked. Industrial units follow different production cycles, which also show up as spurts in
production in different periods. But the structure of the economy should not impede data
collection. The index increased by over 40% four times since FYI 1991, and fell by over 40%
three times since that year.
6. Autonomy of RBI3The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is an autonomous body created under an act of the Indian
parliament i.e. The Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934. But over the past time the Ministry of
Finance has taken every opportunity to clip its wings. Whether on capital account convertibilityor sovereign borrowing (both of which have investment banks salivating at the prospect of
commissions and fees, never mind that it is not in the long-term interests of the country), the RBI
has successfully resisted pressure from vested interests. The fact that the crisis ultimately proved
it right and left the ministry with egg on its face should have humbled the latter. Instead it seems
to have riled it.
Consequently, the ministry has taken every opportunity to clip the bank's wings. Starting with
the decision to set up an FSDC (Financial Stability and Development Council), to setting up a
working group on foreign investment without a single member from the RBI, to the ordinance ,
now enacted as The Securities and Insurance Laws (Amendment and Validation) Act 2010, thatdowngrades the RBI governor from his earlier position as first among equals to officially playing
second fiddle to the finance minister and most recently, to the decision to appoint a search
committee to find a successor to UshaThorat, one of its most competent officers, the ministry has
steadily chipped away at RBI's powers.
The most glaring attack on the bank's autonomy, of course, is the decision to set up an FSDC
under the chairmanship of the finance minister. At a time when most countries are giving more
powers to their central banks - the UK government went so far as to scrap the Financial Services
Authority - the government's decision to reverse gear is incomprehensible.
The potential danger of setting up a committee of this type is that it confers powers on the
government to formally intervene in financial regulatory issues, including monetary policy. This
development is dangerous because governments, particularly elected governments have a short-
term perspective. Governments don't think beyond the next election. Strong central banks are
necessary to protect us from the worst excesses of government. Today when central banks all
over the world are busy buying government debt, central bank independence might seem a bit of
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a myth and the government's latest attempts to cut the ground from under its feet a matter of
trifling detail. But it is not! It is only the thin edge of the wedge; another attempt to chip away at
the hard-won operational autonomy the bank has gained over the years.
As Adam Posen , an external member of the Bank of England monetary policy committee put it,
what matters for (central bank) independence is (the) ability to say 'no' (to political pressure) andmean it, while still holding the right to buy bonds when the economy needs it.
With the government snipping away at the RBI's de-facto (though not de-jure independence) the
fear is that the RBI will lose its ability to say no. That will be a sad day for both the RBI and for
India. Strong institutions are the only guardians of democracy, especially in a fledgling
democracy
7.
Economists view on Monetary policy
2,7,8,9
Tony Cavoli and Ramkishen S. Rajan in their paper mentioned that Critics have argued that theRBIs monetary policy in recent times has been inconsistent and, thus, a source of someconfusion to observers and market participants. More specifically, the RBI remains very elusiveas to what is being targeted and how the target is being attained. Rather, the RBIs monetarypolicy framework has been based on a rather ad hoc combination of sterilized foreign exchangeintervention (via Monetary Stabilisaion Scheme (MSS) bonds), interest rate changes along withnonmarket mechanism (hikes in the cash reserve ratio (CRR), ad hoc capital controls etc)
Research done by Inoue, Takeshi (07-2010) shows that Monetary aggregates such as M1, M2,
M3 had a causal relationship with at least either output (IIP) or price level (WPI or inflation), but
indicators like stock prices and exchange rate, which have a causal relationship with the
output(IIP) level, were not taken into consideration. So in nutshell the monetary policy during
this period would have been more effective if the stock prices and exchange rate werent ignored.
SS Bhalla criticized as Monetary Policy- Just Pain, No gain. The RBI still thinks inoverheating terms because for it there is only one variable the rate of growth of money
supply. For something held so sacred, it is strange to find that the monetarist model (i.e. inflation
is a function of the rate of growth of output and the rate of growth of money supply) finds little,actually zero, analytical support from Indian data. To be sure, there are some quasi research
papers that relate the levels, rather than the rate of growth, of these variables. But estimatingrelationships between levels is akin to stating that the number of TVs causes mental illness
both go up steadily over time.
Maybe the RBI is just doing what officials of other fast-growing economies are doing. This
wont necessarily make the actions right, but it would mean that the RBI is following the global
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herd and we all know that nobody can hold you responsible if you follow the crowd. China
has stopped raising rates and settled at a negative real rate of around -3.5 per cent. Korea just
raised rates by 25 basis points, but to a level of -0.75 per cent real rate. Thus, Indian firms face a
cost of capital some 2 to 5 percentage points higher than its competitors. Both New Zealand and
the Czech Republic have lowered rates by 25 basis points each. Both cited the fact that the
inflation is global, probably conjectured (different than the RBI) that $150/barrel oil should not
be the reference price for monetary policy, and therefore cut rates to provide for inclusive growth
to its citizens.
8. ConclusionThe monetary policies of RBI over the last two decades have had positive effects mostly inspite
of some criticsm by some economic experts. The current state of Indian economy is relativelystable as compared to other world economies. This itself is a testimony of sound policies of RBI.
Experts and economies around the world are now trying to emulate Indian model wherein
regulation and growth go hand in hand.
Inspite of these positive outcomes, there are various areas where improvements can be made.
Rather than following a global herd, a system has to be made to collect Indian data extensively
and policies be framed based on Indian perspective. Improvements can be made in calculating
WPI and IIP, which would help RBI in framing policies efficiently and also in comparing the
inflation levels with other economies around the world. The last but not the least issue is the
autonomy of RBI.It has been observed that Government has been forming committees whichformally intervene in financial regulatory issues. The governance of RBI must be autonomous
without any intervention from the government as it has extensive resources and information to
take the most appropriate decisions.
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List of charts:
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List of tables:
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Table2: Activity in Money Market Segment
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Table3: Multiple indicator approach: Projections versus Achievements
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References:
1. Deepak mohanty;Feb 21st 2010; Speech by Mr Deepak Mohanty, Executive Director of the
Reserve Bank of India, at the Conference of the Orissa Economic Association, Baripada, Orissa.
2. Karthik R; March 19th, 2007; Article; http://rkarthik.blogsome.com/2007/05/19/monetary-policy-and-crangarajan/
3. Mythili Bhusnurmath,ET Bureau; Sept 6th, 2010;
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/opinion/columnists/mythili-bhusnurmath/Shooting-itself-in-
the-foot/articleshow/6503962.cms
4. Nirvikar singh; Aug 31st, 2009; Article; http://www.roubini.com/emergingmarkets-
monitor/257592/uncovering_the_monetary_policy_rule_in_india
5. Rakesh Moahan; March 2007; Speech at 9th Global conference of Actuaries.
6. Rishi Shah, ET Bureau; Sep 17th, 2010; Article;
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/indicators/RBIsaysitcantfigureoutIIPmaths/
articleshow/6569394.cms
7. Rituparna Benerjee, Saugata Bhattacharya; Jan 2008; Paper submitted for annual conference
on Money and finance, 2008, IGIDR;
8. SS Bhalla; Aug 10th, 2008;Blog; http://jvcl.wordpress.com/2008/08/10/monetary-policy-just-
pain-no-gain-critics-by-ss-bhalla/
9. Takesh; July 2010; Discussion paper. No. 242.2010.07; http://hdl.handle.net/2344/901