HomeNewsOpinionRandom portfolio rejigging of RBI deputy governors needs to stop

Random portfolio rejigging of RBI deputy governors needs to stop

The responsibilities of RBI’s four deputy governors need to be defined and given proper titles and job roles. This will ensure that specialists are chosen for these roles, and will signal to the government that appointments need to be made in time as departments cannot be transferred that easily

October 22, 2020 / 11:29 IST
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Last week was highly eventful for top appointments in financial sector. The government made three important appointments in successive days. It started by appointing the three monetary policy committee (MPC) members at the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and followed it with appointing a Deputy Governor at the RBI and Chairperson of the State Bank of India (SBI). Rajeshwar Rao has been appointed as the fourth Deputy Governor, a position which was lying vacant since April. NS Vishwanathan retired in April, three months before his tenure was getting over.

The induction of Rao led to yet another reshuffle of department portfolios amidst the deputy governors (DGs). Since July 23, 2019, when Viral Acharya left the RBI, the central bank has reshuffled the DG portfolio four times with three of these reshuffles in 2020 alone.  What is interesting is how these portfolios were allotted in these four reshuffles.

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On Acharya’s exit, the nine departments under him were allotted to the three existing DGs equally. As BP Kanungo replaced Acharya in the MPC, the three related departments (the Department of Economic and Policy Research, the Department of Statistics & Information Management, and the Monetary Policy Department) were transferred to him. Kanungo already had 10 departments under him and there is little linkage between the old and the new departments. Even more puzzling is that three financial market departments — the Financial Markets Operations Department, the Financial Markets Regulation Department, and the Financial Stability Unit — are not given to one DG, but divided between Vishwanathan and MK Jain.