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The finance ministry statement responded to reports that it had sent letters to RBI governor Urjit Patel in recent weeks, exercising powers under Section 7 on issues ranging from liquidity for non-bank finance companies, capital requirements for weak banks and lending to small- and medium-sized companies.
Section 7 says "the central government may from time to time give such directions to the bank as it may, after consultation with the Governor of the Bank, consider necessary in the public interest".
Never used before in independent India, the law empowers the government to consult and give instructions to the RBI governor in the name of public good.
TV channels reported that RBI Governor Urjit Patel may consider resigning if the government did use its powers to control his decisions and encroach upon the central bank's domain.
It was the letters that were reportedly the provocation behind Deputy Governor Viral Acharya's hard-hitting speech at an event on Friday, in which he warned that toying with the central bank's independence could be "potentially catastrophic".
"Governments that do not respect central bank independence will sooner or later incur the wrath of financial markets, ignite economic fire, and come to rue the day they undermined an important regulatory institution," Viral Acharya had said in the speech that was widely circulated online.
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley later said the RBI "was looking the other way" while banks were lending indiscriminately.
Stating that consultations were held with all regulators, the ministry said: "the government has never made public the subject matter of those consultations. Only the final decisions taken are communicated....The government, through these consultations, places its assessment on issues and suggests possible solutions. The government will continue to do so."
In an attempt to tackle criticism that it is stepping on toes, the government tempered its note saying autonomy for the RBI, "within the framework of the RBI Act, is an essential and accepted governance requirement."
The government's letters to RBI are the latest in a dispute over autonomy. The RBI under Urjit Patel has been pushing for more powers to clean up a banking system saddled with bad debts. The RBI has put lending curbs on some weak state-run banks, while the government, facing the 2019 national election, wants to ensure banks continue to lend to boost economic growth.
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