Ministry of Finance to Implement New Monetary Policy by New Year

Min­istry of Finance has announced a new mon­e­tary pol­i­cy frame­work to be put in place by the New Year. Details have not yet been final­ized but will be con­firmed by the end of Decem­ber in order to be includ­ed in Parliament’s Action Tak­en Report, due in January.

The frame­work sig­nals anoth­er attempt by Finance Min­is­ter Arun Jait­ley to reign in the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) con­trol over mon­e­tary pol­i­cy. Jait­ley has made a point of set­ting aside the his­tor­i­cal­ly acri­mo­nious rela­tion­ship between his pre­de­ces­sors and the cen­tral bank, meet­ing with RBI Gov­er­nor Raghu­ram Rajan to set­tle on an agreed path of infla­tion: eight per­cent by Jan­u­ary 2015 and, more ambi­tious­ly, six per­cent by Jan­u­ary 2016, with a medi­um-term infla­tion tar­get of four per­cent with a 2 per­cent band either way.

The redis­tri­b­u­tion of respon­si­bil­i­ty will also award the RBI greater inde­pen­dence by clar­i­fy­ing its lat­i­tude in pol­i­cy-mak­ing. The Min­istry of Finance offi­cial who announced the mon­e­tary frame­work empha­sized that, The appro­pri­ate infla­tion tar­get for India can­not be decid­ed by the RBI. It has to be decid­ed by the gov­ern­ment. The new frame­work will see the gov­ern­ment set­ting infla­tion tar­gets with a new mon­e­tary pol­i­cy pan­el decid­ing on inter­est rates. Head­ed by Raghu­ram Rajan, the pan­el will con­sist of two oth­er mem­bers of the cen­tral bank and two exter­nal mem­bers and replaces the cur­rent prac­tice where­by the RBI Gov­er­nor is sole­ly accountable.

Rather than mak­ing amend­ments to the RBI Act, the new frame­work is expect­ed to be deter­mined through agree­ments between the Finance Min­istry and the cen­tral bank. “The amend­ments will ide­al­ly be done when the more com­pre­hen­sive amend­ments sug­gest­ed by the Finan­cial Sec­tor Leg­isla­tive Reforms Com­mis­sion are tak­en up,” the offi­cial commented.

Over­all, this restruc­tur­ing marks the first steps to hav­ing “a more mod­ern mon­e­tary pol­i­cy frame­work to meet the chal­lenge of an increas­ing­ly com­plex econ­o­my,” which Arun Jait­ley set for­ward in his July budget.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *