HomeNewsBusinessEconomyExclusive | PNB scam: Check before it’s too late, bullion body had warned Raghuram Rajan about 80:20 gold scheme

Exclusive | PNB scam: Check before it’s too late, bullion body had warned Raghuram Rajan about 80:20 gold scheme

India Bullion and Jewellers Association had accused the previous UPA government of “deliberately yielding to the cronies” by changing the gold policy days before demitting office

March 07, 2018 / 20:04 IST
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2. Raghuram Govind Rajan - Former Reserve Bank of India governor and currently a Katherine Dusak Miller Distinguished Service Professor of Finance at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. Rajan, who graduated from IIT-Delhi in 1985 with a Bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering, also won the Director’s Gold Medal there. (Image: PTI)
2. Raghuram Govind Rajan - Former Reserve Bank of India governor and currently a Katherine Dusak Miller Distinguished Service Professor of Finance at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. Rajan, who graduated from IIT-Delhi in 1985 with a Bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering, also won the Director’s Gold Medal there. (Image: PTI)

Gaurav Choudhury Moneycontrol News

The jewellery industry had warned of an impending scandal in India’s bullion industry caused by former Finance Minister P Chidambaram’s controversial decision to allow 13 traders to import gold four years before the diamond merchant Nirav Modi and his uncle Mehul Choksi fled the country defrauding banks worth an estimated Rs 12,000 crore.

In a letter to the then Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Raghuram Rajan on July 26, 2014, the India Bullion and Jewellers Association (IBJA) had accused the previous UPA government of “deliberately yielding to the cronies” by changing the gold policy days before demitting office.

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A decision was taken on May 21, 2014, five days before the UPA government officially demitted office, allowed 13 'star trading houses (STH)' and 'premier trading houses (PTH)’ including Choksi-led Gitanjali Gems to import gold and sell about 80 percent of their total bullion shipment in local markets under the so-called 80:20 scheme.

This, it now turns out, encouraged gold hoarding and preferentially allowed these traders to profiteer by artificially inflating retail prices.