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Play by rules or look elsewhere, RBI's message to SBI boss

A top RBI official today snubbed SBI Chairman Pratip K Chaudhuri for his remarks suggesting abolition of Cash Reserve Ratio, bluntly telling him that he has to find "some other place" if he could not work as per the central bank's regulatory environment.

August 28, 2012 / 11:44 IST

A top RBI official today snubbed SBI Chairman Pratip K Chaudhuri for his remarks suggesting abolition of Cash Reserve Ratio, bluntly telling him that he has to find "some other place" if he could not work as per the central bank's regulatory environment.


"If the SBI Chairman is not able to do business as per our regulatory environment, he has to find some other place," RBI Deputy Governor K C Chakrabarty said in a sharp reaction to Chaudhuri's recent comment that CRR does not help anybody and it was unfairly put on banks.
    
Chakrabarty was responding to a question by a student of Great Lakes Institute of Management near here during its third annual financial conference "Systemic Risk".
    
To another query as to "which banking tree needed to be protected", Chakrabarty, drawing an analogy to forest fire, said: "Obviously it is the SBI. SBI is too big a tree. If you fail to protect SBI tree, it (the fire) may spread on to other banks and it will turn out to be a systemic failure."
    
Chaudhuri had questioned why the CRR was not applied to insurance companies, non-banking financial companies and mutual funds, who are also mobilising public deposits.
    
"CRR doesn't help anybody and it is unfairly put on the banks," the chief of the country's largest public sector State Bank of India had said last week.
    
Keeping required funds with the Reserve Bank without any interest was costing the banking system about Rs 21,000 crore, Chaudhuri had said. CRR is the amount of deposits banks keep with RBI in cash.
    
In its quarterly monetary policy review, RBI had last month retained the CRR at 4.75 per cent and reduced the Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR) -- the amount of deposits banks park in government bonds -- by 1 per cent to 23%, effective August 11.
    
It had also left key interest rates untouched, a move that disappointed industry and retail borrowers.

first published: Aug 27, 2012 05:00 pm

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