THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 20 FEBRUARY 2019 (Interim bailout: RBI surplus to govt (The Hindu)

Interim bailout: RBI surplus to govt (The Hindu)

Mains Paper 1: Economy
Prelims level: Interim surplus
Mains level: Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilization of resources, growth, development and employment

Context

  •  The Reserve Bank of India to transfer an interim surplus of ₹28,000 crore to the Centre should come as a big relief to the Modi government.
  •  Together with the ₹40,000-crore final surplus share for 2017-18, which the Centre received in the first half, the total receipts from the RBI this fiscal will be a tidy ₹68,000 crore.
  •  For a government strapped for finances and struggling to meet the revised fiscal deficit target of 3.4% of GDP, the RBI’s largesse will be handy.

About the interim surplus transfer

  •  The total surplus received by the Centre for 2018-19 is substantially higher than the ₹50,000 crore it got from the RBI in 2017-18, and this is the second successive year the central bank is making an interim transfer: last year it transferred ₹10,000 crore.
  •  Though there is nothing wrong in a shareholder demanding an interim dividend payout, the fact is that the Centre is advancing a receipt from the next fiscal to bail itself out in the current one.
  •  Should the RBI decide not to repeat this practice, the government’s revenues will suffer because as much as ₹82,911 crore has been budgeted on this count for the next fiscal.
  •  The RBI’s income and surplus growth cannot be measured in commercial terms since a large part of it comes from statutory functions it has to perform as a regulator.

Implications in the past

  •  The large payout this fiscal is bound to raise eyebrows, especially because of the recent history of conflict between the RBI and the Centre over the sharing of the former’s accumulated reserves as dividend with the Centre. Pressure on this count was said to be a major reason for the resignation of Urjit Patel as RBI Governor.
  •  Though the practice of an interim payout started under Mr. Patel, there are inevitable questions over whether there was pressure from the Centre now for the transfer of a higher sum than last year.
  •  This is because the Centre had in the Interim Budget bumped up receipts under this head from the central bank, nationalised banks and other financial institutions to ₹74,140 crore from the original estimate of ₹54,817 crore made in the 2018-19 Budget.

Conclusion

  •  There will, hopefully, be a system and a structure in place once the committee under former RBI Governor Bimal Jalan, that is now reviewing the economic capital framework for the RBI, submits its report.
  •  It was constituted to de-personalise and institutionalise a system for the sharing of the RBI’s surpluses with the government, and is expected to come out with its recommendations by the end of the next month.

Online Coaching for UPSC PRE Exam

General Studies Pre. Cum Mains Study Materials

Prelims Questions:

Q.1) Banni is the largest grassland of Asia and is spread across 2,717 square km. The Banni grassland can be found in which of the following Indian state?
(a) Himachal Pradesh
(b) Gujarat
(c) Jammu and Kashmir
(d) Nagaland

Answer: B

Mains Questions:
Q.1) A system for sharing the RBI’s surpluses with the Centre must be quickly institutionalized. Give your arguments in this regard of this statement.