Saturday, July 30, 2011

New series of Rs five, Rs two coins

Chennai, July 29 (PTI): The Reserve Bank of India will soon put into circulation new series of coins of Rs two and Rs five denominations. An RBI press release said The Rs two coin would have on the obverse side, the lion capitol of Ashoka Pillar with the legend 'Satyameva Jayathe' (in Hindi) flanked on the left periphery with the word Bharat (in Hindi) and on the right periphery flanked with the word INDIA in English. the face of the coin would have the denomination 2 in international numerals, flanked on the left and right periphery with the floral design. The upper periperhy would have the Rupee symbol and the year of minting in international numerals shall be on the lower periphery. It said the face of the Rs five coin on the obverse would have the lion capitol of Ashoka Pillar with the legend Satyameva Jayate (in Hindi) inscribed below, flanked on the left periphery with the word Bharat (in Hindi) and on the right periphery flanked with the word INDIA in English. the face of this coin on the reverse would bear the denominational value 5 in the international numerals flanked on the left and right periphery with the floral design. the upper periphery would bear the Rupee symbol and the year of minting in international numerals shall also be shown on the lower periphery. The existing Rs five and Rs two coins in circulation shall also continue to be legal tender, it said.
IBN Live

Raise minimum capital requirement for micro finance institutions say experts

New Delhi: Industry experts today called for raising the minimum capital requirement of Rs 5 lakh for micro finance institutions (MFIs) to avoid influx of operators. At the same time, definition of micro credit needs to be worked out clearly when the Micro Finance Institutions (Development and Regulation) Bill 2011 is placed in Parliament, they said at a roundtable discussion organised by The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (ASSOCHAM). The new law should spell out prudential norms for deposit and thrift collections besides a firm and transparent regulatory framework. Experts said the bill on MFIs is a positive development as the industry has been clamouring for a technology-backed regulatory environment over the past many years. India is one of the largest micro finance loan market in the world with the sector having potential to grow at an annual average of 50 per cent, and attracting domestic and foreign investors hoping to practice profitable philanthropy. Once the new law is in place, said experts, inflow of funds from banks will increase. The recent RBI intervention by constituting Malegaon Committee is a progressive step to regulate the sector and tackle issues like cost of raising funds, interest rates, loan ticket size, repayment options and high operating costs due to door-to-door step facilities. Micro finance loans in the country serve as the last-mile bridge to low-income population estimated at 600 million which is excluded from traditional financial services system and seeks to fill the gap. Industry leaders said the introduction of multi-purpose national identity cards is expected to revolutionise the micro-finance sector by bringing down transaction costs. Bigger financial institutions with huge funds do not find commercially feasible to lend to the poor as they cannot offer anything as collateral security. Though micro-finance in the organised sector is still at nascent stages, it can metamorphose into a bigger activity if given the right fillip. The present quantum of micro-finance can be enhanced by sustained efforts on the part of financial institutions, self help groups and interested NGOs. The issues of alternate funding, reduction in operating costs, restricting indebtedness and income criteria need to be fine-tuned and supported for healthy and vibrant growth of micro-finance institutions, said the experts. The ultimate purpose of micro-finance has been to provide small ticket size credit to the most vulnerable sections of the society – more specifically to women. It has been able to generate employment as well as income to larger sections of the lowest strata of the pyramid. Among those present in the discussion were Mr P.K. Jain, chairman and managing director of The Malt & Company, Mr Samit Ghosh, managing director of Ujjivan Financial Services, Mr Suresh Krishna, managing director of Grameen Financial Services, and Mr Jyotirmoy Jain, advisor and head of ASSOCHAM’s banking and finance division. Some experts said the bill should have provisions to keep away objections from states.
orissadiary.com

A burst of energy

There seems to be a newfound urgency in government—at last. Consider the evidence. The ministry of rural development on Friday unveiled the draft Bill on land acquisitions, one of the most contentious issues in India right now. Earlier, we have seen a modest increase in fuel prices, clearances for two major deals involving multinational investment (Reliance-BP and Cairn-Vedanta), a fresh push towards foreign investment in modern retail, and getting in Bihar finance minister Sushil Modi to head the panel on the goods and services tax. There was also no public pushback from the finance ministry when the Reserve Bank of India raised interest rates by a stiff 50 basis points this week to fight high inflation. These are positive signals, but amount to tentative moves that kept getting postponed at various points of time since 2004. The policy paralysis is costing India dear.
Mint

Lending rates shoot up post RBI rate hike, FDs to shine

Within days of the stiff hike in key rates by the central bank, lenders pass on the burden to borrowers to protect their margins
Mumbai :  Countering the 50 bps hike in key rates by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), about half a dozen banks, including Punjab National Bank (PNB), IDBI Bank and Central Bank of India raised their lending and deposit rates by up to 1.5%. Leading public sector lenders Central Bank of India, IDBI Bank, Punjab National Bank (PNB) and Oriental Bank of Commerce (OBC) raised their rates. While all loans, including home and auto will become expensive, depositors will get better returns on their savings. While Central Bank of India, IDBI Bank and PNB announced an increase of 75 basis point in their base rates, OBC hiked its base rate by 50 bps. Base rate is the minimum lending rate below which banks cannot lend to their best borrowers. Post the increase, the base rate of the four banks stand at 10.75%. An IDBI statement said, " the hikes have been undertaken " keeping in view the measures announced by RBI, inflation and liquidity scenario." IDBI also hiked its Benchmark Prime Lending Rate (BPLR) by 75 bps to 15.25%. The BPLR of PNB has been hiked by 75 bps to 14.25 per cent while OBC's BPLR stood at 15%. Both IDBI and Central Bank of India said the hikes are effective August 1. On July 26, RBI had increased its short- term lending and borrowing rates by a higher- than- expected 50 bps to 8 percent and 7 percent respectively, saying inflation is the biggest threat to the economy. The very same day private sector banks had raised its rates by 50 bps. Central Bank, which declared a 17 percent drop in Q1 results to Rs 281 crore today on higher provisioning, also increased its prime lending lending rate by 50 basis points to 15 per cent.
Deposit rates only reason to cheer
On deposit rates, a Central Bank of India official said they have increased their rates by 40 basis points in the short term category, leaving the rest unchanged. IDBI Bank increased its deposit rates by 25 to 150 basis points in different maturity buckets, a statement issued here said. The interest rate on term deposit between 91- 179 days of OBC will now earn 8 per cent from existing level of 7 per cent, an increase of 100 basis points. Earlier, Bangalore- based Canara Bank (50 basis points) and Bank of India (75 basis points) too had raised their base rates. Earlier this week, the RBI raised the short- term lending ( repo) rate by 50 basis points to 8 per cent and the short- term borrowing ( reverse repo) rate to 7 per cent in a bid to tame inflation. Subsequently, the interest rate under the Marginal Standing Facility, an additional borrowing window, has gone up to 9 per cent from the earlier level of 8.5 per cent. More banks are likely to announce interest rate hike in the next few days as cost of funds has gone up following increase in key lending rates by the central bank.
FPJ

Friday, July 29, 2011

Well-crafted monetary policy - S. S. Tarapore


Unswerving in their anti-inflationary stance…
The RBI Governor, Dr Subbarao, with his team
Expectations that inflation would taper off have been belied. Therefore, the RBI has rightly prioritised inflation control over other objectives. Both, industry and banks are unlikely to be hurt by the rate hike.

The RBI Governor, Dr D. Subbarao's Monetary Policy announcement on July 26, is one of the very best policy statements from the Reserve Bank of India in recent years. The policy is unswerving in its anti-inflationary stance and the guidance is unequivocal. The policy does not look for kudos but is focused on RBI's dharma of inflation control. Expectations that inflation would taper off have been belied and, therefore, the RBI has prioritised inflation control, overriding all other objectives. The GDP growth in 2010-11 is estimated at 8.5 per cent and, in all probability, this estimate would undergo an upward revision. Thus, growth is exploring its limits.

HIKE NOT EXCESSIVE

The current inflation rate is, however, a great worry and embarrassment to the RBI, with a year-on-year increase at the end of June 2011 of 9.4 per cent. The revised number could well end up in double digits.  As against the earlier projection of inflation at the end of March 2012 of 6.0 per cent, the RBI has now had to raise this to 7.0 per cent, and there are fears that if domestic and international conditions turn unfavourable, the inflation rate at the end of March 2012 could be much higher.  The current inflation rate is way above the RBI's comfort zone of 4.0-4.5 per cent. Furthermore, the inexorable integration with the world economy would require that in the medium-term, the RBI would need to work towards a much lower inflation rate of 3.0 per cent. The RBI has taken a bold step to raise the repo rate from 7.5 per cent to 8.0 per cent and the Marginal Standing Facility rate from 8.5 per cent to 9.0 per cent.  This measure would not go down well with India Inc. as well as banks. But while any borrower would like to get credit as cheaply as possible, it needs to be recognised that the 0.50 per cent increase in the repo rate would not be disruptive. The average interest cost in industry is around 10 per cent of total costs and an increase of 0.50 per cent in interest cost would raise overall costs by 0.05 per cent. In the case of interest-sensitive sectors, let us assume that interest cost is 20 per cent of total costs; a 0.50 per cent rise in interest cost would raise the overall cost by 0.10 per cent. Thus, the overall impact on total costs would be insignificant. As a general rule, banks are more comfortably placed when interest rates are rising than when they are falling. This is essentially because the increase in interest cost impacts faster on average effective lending rates than on average effective deposit rates; the reverse applies when policy rates fall. It is paradoxical that banks moan when policy rates rise and make merry when policy rates fall!

ENTRENCHED INFLATION

Many policy observers have pointed out that when deposit rates are higher than the RBI policy rate, the RBI becomes the lender of first resort rather than the lender of last resort, as it should be. Thus, in the current Indian context there was an obvious case for a rise in the policy rate. The RBI has indicated that it would review policies if the growth rate and the inflation rate fall precipitously. There is, however, only a remote possibility of the growth rate falling below 7.5 per cent in 2011-12 and the inflation rate falling below 5.0 per cent. The fear, if any, is that the inflation rate would be uncomfortably high as reflected in the RBI's projection for March 2012 of 7 per cent.  Market players need to appreciate that the present repo rate of 8.0 per cent cannot be the end of the policy rate increases.  Global uncertainties, the monsoon and other domestic uncertainties point to the fact that the policy interest rate would need further increases in September and October 2011, particularly as inflation is getting wedged in strongly, and the longer one waits the more difficult it is to eradicate inflation from the system. The policy statement makes an important point that in the last decade, the average inflation rate had moderated to around 5.5 per cent. Given the present unacceptable inflation rate, the RBI has reiterated its strong view that controlling inflation is imperative both for sustaining growth as also increasing the potential for growth in the medium-term.  While the policy measures and their articulation are par excellence, we need to give some thought to the use of a measure which would render the monetary policy more effective.  The RBI could have considered a moderate increase in the cash reserve ratio (CRR) which would then have eased the pressure on the interest rate instrument.  It is important for market participants to understand and appreciate the thrust of the July 26, 2011 policy, as it would be a watershed in the emergence of monetary policy as an effective tool of overall economic policy.
HBL

iCreate Software announces RBI guidelines-compliant automated data flow solution for banks

Bangalore: The RBI with a vision of ensuring accuracy and integrity of data flowing from the banking system to the regulator recently released an approach paper on Automated Data Flow (ADF-a straight through process) from various transactional systems of the banks to RBI. Bangalore-based, iCreate Software announced reporting solution BizScoreto enable banks comply with RBI's Automated Data Flow guidelines. A packaged BI/analytics solution built specifically for banks, Biz$corefeatures an Extraction Transaction Loading (ETL) layer integrates with core and transactional banking systems, and extracts data from these systems and loads into a Consolidated Data Repository (CDR) which is engineered for automated generation of RBI returns through pre-built reporting templates. Vivek Subramanyam, CEO, iCreate said, "We are extremely happy about the release of Biz$core's RBI ADF solution that in addition to helping banks become ADF compliant will provide a robust platform to build and deploy industry leading prebuilt Banking Business Intelligence & Analytics solutions to benefit their business stakeholders. At iCreate, given that we are India based, we are delighted to partner with Indian banks on our award winning Banking BI solutions while we continue to see significant traction globally as well." Banks accelerate their RBI's Automated Data Flow solution implementation, iCreate held a webinar on 5 July that focused on topics like 'highlights of RBI's Automated Data Flow requirements and the implications for banks', 'Complexity and intricacies around ensuring compliance', 'Solution options based on each bank's context',' Highlights of Biz$core RBI ADF solution'. 
Siliconindia News

Financial inclusion crucial to counter terrorist financing

.....Financial inclusion is so important to countering the financing of terrorism and it brings those who normally use cash or the black market into the formal financial system at an affordable cost......

CIMP meet calls for financial inclusion of rural poor

PATNA: An international conference on 'Financial Inclusion and Economic Growth - Theory and Evidences' here on Thursday stressed on ensuring timely and adequate credit through microfinancing to the rural poor and low-income group people at affordable rate.  The conference was held under the aegis of Chandragupta Institute of Management (CIMP). The participants included the representatives of RBI, Nabard, microfinance institutions, NGOs, acamedicians, technology providers, government departments and universities, including those from the University of Central Lancashire, UK. Inaugurating the conference, development commissioner K C Saha said that most of the rural poor do not have accounts in banks. A large number of them are still in the clutches of moneylenders. He said that they should be linked to microfinance institutions through self-help groups (SHGs) for providing finance to them, so that they become productive and wriggle out of the clutches of moneylenders. He said that in Darbhanga and some other North Bihar districts, many SHG members had utilized the money received through microfinancing for paying back their loans to moneylenders. In his keynote address, professor, development finance and public policy, UCLAN, Lancashire, UK, T G Arun, mentioned the highlights of his research work 'Determinant of Access to Finance: An Intervention into the Mzansi Intervention in South Africa". He said that Mzansi accountholders viewed the account mainly as a vehicle for receiving payments. Even after becoming financially literate, they did not have the aspiration to move up the financial ladder.  The chief executive officer of Bihar Livelihoods Promotion Society, Arvind Chaudhary, stressed on the need for adequate and timely credit for the rural poor at affordable interest rate. He added that financial counselling to the beneficiaries was vital. He invited CIMP and other groups for their involvement in livelihood programmes.  CIMP director V Mukunda Das said that in Bihar, high financial inclusion was needed. He said that 62.5 lakh rural people have 'no-frill account' (account opened with zero balance) through microfinance in Bihar. He expressed hope that this success in financial inclusion would continue. DGM, Nabard, Pradip Kumar, stressed on harnessing microservice finance institutions for inclusive growth in the state.
TOI

Banker's Trust

Free market not good for small borrowers - K.C.Chakrabarty

RBI cautions RRBs on dealing with overseas entities

The Reserve Bank on Thursday asked all Regional Rural Banks to follow due diligence while dealing with transactions from persons and entities in eight countriers — Bolivia, Cuba, Ethiopia, Kenya, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Syria and Turkey. The bank cited a 2011 statement from the Financial Action Task Force — the inter-governmental body working to develop national and international policies to combat money laundering and terrorist financing — which cautioned countries regarding the risks associated with these nations. “All RRBs are accordingly advised to take into account risks arising from the deficiencies in anti-money laundering /combating the financing of terrorism regime of these countries, while entering into business relationships and transactions with persons (including legal persons and other financial institutions) from or in these countries/ jurisdictions,” the RBI said in a notification. According to it, FATF has these eight countries as having not made sufficient progress in addressing the deficiencies associated with AML/CFT and they have not committed to an action plan developed with the FATF to address the issues. “The FATF calls on its members to consider the risks arising from the deficiencies associated with each jurisdiction as described in the statement: Bolivia, Cuba, Ethiopia, Kenya, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Syria and Turkey,” it said. The FATF had also identified Iran and North Korea with regard to deficiencies in AML/CFT regime and the RBI had earlier cautioned RRBs in this regard.
HBL

Using third-party ATMs? Find out how customer-friendly they are!

Over the last couple of years, the way you carry out your banking transactions has changed a lot, particularly via the new-age, technology-enabled platforms. Be it making payments online, swiping your cards at shopping outlets or withdrawing cash from ATMs (automated teller machines) - all routine transactions have become more user-friendly and secure, if not foolproof.  This is thanks largely to the Reserve Bank of India's regulations to strengthen the safety infrastructure for such transactions and the steps taken by banks to encourage the use of such alternative channels instead of bank branches.

Islamic banks draw attention

THIRVANANTHAPURAM: The aggressive revision of interest rates by Reserve Bank of India, its eleventh upward hike since March 2010, could give an unintended boost to a fledgling business the central bank has never been enthusiastic about; Islamic banking. With interest rates threatening to go beyond the reach of the common man, the interest-free Islamic banks in the state are attempting to position themselves as an alternative source of finance. “Under the existing system, a customer is forced to bear a cost for which he is not responsible,’’ says Tanvir Mohidheen, the Chief Operating Officer of Alternative Investments and Credit Limited (AICL), a Shariat-compliant entity. Islamic banks, according to Tanvir, insulates the consumer from the frequent shocks administered by the RBI. Islamic banks primarily have two ways of providing home and auto loans. One is the ‘cost + margin model’, ‘murahaba’ in Shariat parlance. Here, the Islamic bank purchases the house or car for a costand then fixes a ‘negotiated’ margin. The customer will then have to pay the cost and the margin as monthly instalments. The margin never changes unlike in the case of the mainstream banking system where there are floating or market-sensitive interest rates. The second is the ‘musharaka’ model. The bank will provide 70 per cent of the finance to purchase a car or a home. This means, to purchase a car worth Rs. 6 lakh, the bank will provide Rs. 4.2 lakh. So, for a repayment period of five years, the consumer will have to pay a monthly instalment of `7,000. This is not all. The bank will fix a monthly rent, which will be half the existing market rent. “The best part of this model is that the liability comes down with every monthly payment,’’ Tanvir said. In contrast, for car loans in the mainstream banking sector the current interest rates hover between 12 and 13 per cent. So, for a `6-lakh loan for five years, the customer has to pay an EMI of over Rs 13,000 a month at 12 per cent. And now this is all set to shoot up with banks forced to revise their prime lending rate following the RBI’s higher-than-expected hike in repo rates. Economic experts predict a 16-18 per cent rise in interest rates. Former Finance Minister and economist T M Thomas Isaac, who was instrumental in starting the debate about Islamic banks in the state, says that in periods of rising interest rates, Islamic banks emerge as a cheaper alternative. “The finance is not market-driven and the repayment is fixed in moral terms,”Isaac said. However, economists such as Pulapre Balakrishnan and D Narayana are highly skeptical. Narayana says Islamic banking is just a drop in the ocean. “It cannot be of any purpose as long as it is just a miniscule part of our financial system,’’ he says. CDS director Pulapre Balakrishnan is even dismissive. ‘’Interest-free banking offers no solution whatsoever. It is simply not acceptable that certain banks, just because they don’t charge interest rates, are not amenable to RBI’s monetary actions which are generally carried out for public good,’’ Balakrishnan said.
IBN Live

Inflation and RBI’s role

This refers to the edit “No pain, no gain” (July 27). Your call for the central bank and the government to put their heads together to contain inflation is timely. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has been very active in changing monetary policy, but the government’s dormant role is quite regrettable. RBI has, for the first time, warned the central government about the absence of complementary measures — supplyside management and corrective fiscal policy. Considering that the monetary authority was forced to revise its inflation target to seven per cent (from six per cent announced in May) by March 2012, the central bank should persuade the government to revisit the issue of its responsibility to contain inflation. There is no point in continuing to use monetary tools to curb a trend that has more to do with fiscal and supply issues.
KV Rao, Bangalore (BS)
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) seems bent on a single-point formula to beat inflation — which is to increase lending rates. For the past several months, RBI has been increasing the lending rates and this has had no effect on inflation. The manufacturing sector, which borrows from the market, is increasing prices to cover the financial cost. And traders will do the same thing leading to a vicious cycle that will ultimately affect the common man. RBI and the government seem to have run out of ideas. Can eminent economists in India suggest some useful and effective ideas?
V.Vedagiri, Chennai (BS)

RBI’s policy will affect the common man

This refers to the steep & more than expected increase in the policy rates by 0.5 bps by the RBI. RBI’s 11th Repo & Reverse Repo hike, since last 16 months is sure to suffocate the economy. The policy rates have been revised from 3.25 % to 8 % during the last 16 months. The upward revision will have cascading effect on the prices of food, fuel & products under the manufacturing sector. Still worse will be the immediate impact of the policy rates on the rate of interest on Housing Loans, Auto & Personal loans. RBI is repeating its mistakes without addressing the real issues on the supply chain & the lag effect of the data itself.  The knee jerk approach of the RBI will adversely impact the GDP at the macro level & the misery of the common man at the grass root level.
S Narendra, Bangalore (Deccan Herald)

Andhra Bank expects pressure on NIM after RBI rates hike

Hyderabad : City-based public sector lender Andhra Bank today said there could be some pressure on its Net Interest Margin (NIM) and credit off take in the short- term range, following a hike in key policy rates by RBI. The bank reported a net profit of Rs 386 crore for the quarter ended June 30 in FY 12, up 20.63 per cent over the same period last fiscal. The pressure on NIM could be in the range of 15-20 basis points for the present quarter, the bank's Chairman and Managing Director R Ramachandran said. "I presume that there will be an impact of 15 to 20 basis points during this quarter. Beyond that what will happen in the remaining quarters depend on how things will happen," Ramachandran told mediapersons here after announcing the first quarter results. The NIM stood at 3.77 per cent for the first quarter as against 3.72 during the Q1 of the previous fiscal. To a query, Ramachandran said the bank will take a call on increasing interest rates after a meeting with officials of assets and liability teams. On the demand for credit, he said there will be some slow down in the credit off take due to interest rate hike. "I anticipate a little bit slow down going forward and there is possibility that the credit growth in the remaining one or two quarters will be slower. Generally, the industry shows slow down in the credit growth," the banker said. The bank's total income stood at Rs 2,851 crore in the quarter, up 37.53 per cent over last year, while operating profits are at Rs 700 crore as against Rs 510 crore during the corresponding quarter in the last year.
IBN Live

2G: Yashwant Sinha wants to summon Chidambaram for probe

With A. Raja dragging Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and P. Chidambaram in the 2G case, BJP leader Yashwant Sinha has asked Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) Chairman P.C. Chacko to summon the Home Minister as a witness before the committee. Several other members of the Joint Parliamentary Committee have written to Mr. Chacko with requests to make various former Finance Ministers as witness before the panel looking into the 2G scam. Besides former Finance Ministers, at least four members have suggested that RBI Governor and former Finance Secretary D. Subbarao be made a witness. Mr. Sinha wrote to Mr. Chacko on Wednesday requesting him to include the name of Mr. Chidambaram as a witness. “I am collecting all the letters and the Committee will take a decision by consensus on whom to be called...the politicians which include former Telecom Ministers and former Finance Ministers will appear before the Committee at the end,” Mr. Chacko told reporters after the JPC meeting.
HBL

Govt must heed warning by RBI

The message from Tuesday’s monetary policy announcement by the Reserve Bank is that we will have to live with inflation and moderating growth for some more time due to a combination of domestic and global factors. The RBI has in fact revised its wholesale price index up to seven per cent for March 2012, against the six per cent it projected in May. This is due to rising crude prices, domestic demand-supply factors and the likely demand scenario in the months ahead. The fuel price hike in May/June this year will add 70 basis points to WPI inflation as a direct impact, and much more indirectly. There are also hidden inflationary factors like higher coal prices in future, which can lead to higher power tariffs. Commodity prices are unstable globally, and a constant source of inflationary pressures. But the nagging question that remains is whether the RBI’s monetary policy is the only weapon available to control inflation. It has been noted that since March 2010, the repo rate (that at which the RBI lends to banks) has been hiked by 2.25 per cent, while inflation has declined in this period by less than one per cent — from 10.3 per cent to 9.4 per cent. Inflation remains stubbornly high, but growth is decelerating. The RBI has said there is no evidence yet of a sharp or broad-based slowdown, but there are signs that growth is moderating, particularly in interest-sensitive sectors. The RBI’s controlled exasperation over the government’s ineffectiveness in controlling inflation is spelt out clearly in the monetary policy document. It makes it clear that the RBI was forced to take harsher measures in “the absence of complementary policy responses on both the demand and supply sides”. This is a reference to the absence of appropriate government action to deal with supply bottlenecks, specially in food and infrastructure, as a result of which inflation is going up.  Sound policies are needed to keep the supply of various products — particularly essential items — in pace with demand. We have only been hearing from the government about demand rising due to increased wages and earnings in rural India, but very little on what is being done to boost supply. The RBI, for instance, has warned that if the rains are not even in different parts of the country, and crops like coarse grains and pulses and protein-rich items are affected, food inflation will rise further.  One hopes the government is listening, and will arrange for imports if there is a shortfall in the production of these items. The agriculture and food and civil supplies ministers cannot say they have not been warned.  India has huge foreign exchange reserves, and such imports, done in time, can prevent spiralling food inflation. The government must act on several fronts — taking both fiscal and administrative decisions swiftly — if inflation is to be controlled. The other critical issue is the fiscal deficit, which could overshoot the government’s 4.6 per cent target.  Fiscal consolidation is critical to managing inflation, the RBI noted, but the government is yet to cut down on frivolous and unproductive spending, which are inflationary, and invest in badly-needed infrastructure. 
Deccan Chronicle

Multi-pronged strategy

This is with reference to “Record output, stubborn prices” (Business Line, July 28). It is pertinent to note that prices of perishable items, such as vegetables, are steadily increasing. The rate increase of RBI has had no effect on this. An acceptable argument is that a healthy GDP growth, together with benefits of socially-inclusive government schemes, is putting more money into the hands of the common man and thus consumers are migrating from low-income to middle-income groups and hence, the fast growing demand is outstripping the supply response.  Right at the time when the global economy is showing a nascent recovery, which could assist manufacturers, we are increasing the cost of capital to this sector. The RBI rate increase at this critical juncture could be a two-edged sword. No one step will be able to bring inflation under control. The government must adopt a multi-pronged strategy to contain inflation. Agricultural reform must go hand-in-hand with tuning up fiscal and monetary policies.
R. Narayanan, Ghaziabad (HB)

Anti-inflationary stance

A hike in the key policy rates by 50 basis points has certainly taken the markets by surprise. The central bank has retained the economic growth estimate at 8 per cent for the current fiscal but has raised its March-end inflation projection to 7 per cent from 6 per cent. The current level of inflation, at 9.44 per cent, is well above the RBI's comfort zone of 4 per cent. The monetary policy stance, therefore, continues to be anti-inflationary and it is clear that the RBI is prepared to sacrifice growth in the near-to-medium term for the sake of moderating inflation.  True, the frequent rate hikes aren't good for the country, as it will slowdown economic activities, but if the past is any indication, let's understand that the central bank is in the right position to judge things and make policy initiatives to take the economy forward.
S. Umashankar, Nagpur (HBL)

RBI bolt to elevate pain? Motilal AMC sees market slump

"The market is likely to fall and test the lower end again, as reforms from the government’s side would be incapable in offsetting the losses caused from RBI’s steeper-than-expected policy rate tightening,"

Read........... 

Policymaking marred by incorrect data

....Dr. Subbarao has included in his critique not only the index of industrial production (IIP) numbers (which, he said, showed “counter-intuitive trends”), but also the data on unemployment and wages, growth and inflation – all of which, he regretted, “do not inspire confidence (and) on some instances led to off-the-mark estimates on the economy…(and) policy miscalculations”! .....

Read...............

RBI Extends Credit Relaxations in J&K by One Year

To encourage trade and industry in Jammu and Kashmir, the Reserve Bank today extended concessions to bank customers in the state till March 31, 2012......

Read.......

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Former RBI guv Reddy backs Subbarao's rate hike decision


Former Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Yaga Venugopal Reddy has termed the central bank’s repo rate rise decision an appropriate and balanced action. “He (RBI governor Duvvuri Subbarao) has explained the position. I think the Governor’s statement is very balanced, very appropriate as far as I could understand,” Reddy said. He, however, said since he was no longer involved in monetary policy making, it was not possible to have the same insight as the incumbent Governor. “As an academic, with some past understanding I would consider it a very very appropriate action and I can’t imagine any other appropriate solution. And, I think the approach is right under the current situation,” Reddy said on the sidelines of an Exim Bank event. Subbarao became the Governor of RBI in September 2008, after Reddy completed his five-year tenure. Subbarao was given a three-year tenure, which ends this September, and it’s still not clear whether the government will give him an extension. Reddy said RBI must have taken into account the effect of the past rises while taking the decision to go for a 50 basis points rise this time. “I am sure the governor has taken into account the transmission that had happened,” he said. On fiscal issues, Reddy, however, said the situation needed to be watched carefully. RBI has emphasized on the need for maintaining the government’s fiscal deficit target to keep inflation under check. On whether financial stability should be an explicit mandate of the central bank, Reddy said even if without being explicit, the central bank always assumes the role for maintaining financial stability. “Without being explicit, it’s been already been accepted, it’s been interpreted…For the last ten years, I have been saying so. Globally also, it’s also accepted in three-four countries. In others, whether it’s a mandate or not, the central bank has to de facto assume the responsibility of financial stability,” he said.
BS

Banks need to improve NPA mgmt: Chakrabarty


With lending rates rising, fears of banks’ asset quality deteriorating are gaining ground. In such conditions, banks should improve their bad loan management system, said K C Chakrabarty, deputy governor, Reserve Bank of India (RBI). Senior RBI officials were addressing analysts and researchers a day after increasing policy rates by 50 basis points to clamp on inflation. Chakrabarty said non-performing assets (NPAs) may increase, as interest rates rise. “We are only warning banks that their NPA monitoring system should be better. Risks can be mitigated if banks are able to identify them earlier,” he said. Pointing out the faults in outdated systems, he said there were enough gaps in the NPA monitoring process—from identification to follow-up to recovery. The process needed to be accelerated, he said. Lately, NPA accretion has been more evident in the case of public sector banks, as they move to a system that identifies bad loans without human intervention. Deputy governor Subir Gokarn said a rise in the cash reserve ratio would not have been beneficial. “It would disrupt normal business for banks. Since liquidity is already in deficit mode and policy transmission is better in such conditions, it was better to use a repo rate rise,” he said. Gokarn added the cumulative impact of past rate rise actions would bring down inflation from the November-December period. In the first quarter policy review, RBI increased the inflation projection for the end of this financial year from six per cent to seven per cent. Inflation, as measured by the wholesale price index, stood at 9.44 per cent in June. Economists say the figure may touch double digits on revision. Yesterday’s rate rise created an arbitrage opportunity for global players, which was reflected in the appreciation of the Indian rupee by 22 paise against the dollar. RBI said it did not intervene with the objective to set the exchange rate. “Exchange rates have to be market determined. If the rupee appreciates, it would have a positive impact on inflation, as imports would become cheaper,’’ said Gokarn.On the government’s borrowing plan, deputy governor H R Khan said RBI would take advantage of the flat yield curve and continue to sell more longer-dated papers. Higher government borrowing through cash management bills and treasury bills lifted yields at the shorter end, flattening the yield curve. RBI on Wednesday auctioned Rs 10,000 crore worth of treasury bills. It is set to auction Rs 12,000 crore of dated government securities on Friday.
BS  

An Economist's Miscellany - Book Review by P.P.Ramachandran

THIS BOOK BRINGS TOGETHER AN ECLECTIC COLLECTION OF WRITINGS ON THE WORLD OF ACADEME, POLITICS, AND POLICY. IT ALSO PUTS ON DISPLAY KAUSHIK BASU’S LITERARY FORAYS -TRANSLATIONS OF TWO BENGALI SHORT STORIES AND A FOUR- ACT PLAY.


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RBI in talks with banks for 3-year financial inclusion plan

Villages/hamlets with the least population even below 2,000 should also get banking facilities through banking facilitators.”


Hubli, July 27: The Reserve Bank of India is working on a three-year financial inclusion plan and is in talks with banks to see how to take this forward, said Ms Uma Shankar, Regional Director. Addressing the senior officials of Dharwad-based Karnataka Vikas Grameena Bank (KVGB) during her maiden visit to the bank's headquarters, Ms Shankar said RBI wants to connect every Indian to the country's banking system. Even after 40 years of bank nationalisation, 60 per cent of the population donot have bank accounts and many people do not get loans. “If banks are connected to people, the progress automatically starts and banks will also get more business. In the future, we want banks to go everywhere with simple banking products with technology”, she pointed out. “In this connection, where bank branches cannot be opened, RBI has asked all banks to engage business correspondents (moving with biometric and other devices)to extend the banking services to all the adult citizens,” she added. The Regional Director asked the banks to develop their own business models to achieve financial inclusion completely.  While appreciating the efforts of Karnataka Vikas Grameena Bank under financial inclusion, she said the regional rural banks could play a major role. “The RBI has clear vision and planning to bring the entire population within the banking fold by 2015. Villages/hamlets with the least population even below 2,000 should also get banking facilities through banking facilitators,” she said. “The Reserve Bank of India is celebrating its Platinum jubilee (75th year) and, on this occasion, has come out with several programmes to reach out to the common man,” Ms Shankar added. Mr Vasudev Kalakundri, General Manager KVGB, detailed the performance of the bank and its social involvement . Mr G Ramanathan, General Manager of Syndicate Bank and Convener, SLBC, Mr A.K.Bhattacharya, General Manager, RBI, also spoke and Mr Muralinath Gupta, General Manager of KVGB, proposed the vote of thanks.
HBL

In RBI we trust

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) should be congratulated for sticking to its dharma of fighting inflation by raising the policy rates stiffly despite the contrarian pressures brought on it by vested interests. If there is one institution left in the country that can be depended on to look at policy options in national interest, it is RBI. Though RBI could be hamstrung by a politically-motivated finance ministry, fortunately the finance minister seems to have given it a free hand to formulate policy. There is an undertone of unhappiness in RBI’s statement that in addition to its own responsibilities, it also has to shoulder the government’s burden of fighting inflation. The thoughtless extension of the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme without considering its consequences and the mismanagement of the foodgrain stocks are just some examples and show that monetary policy cannot take any compensatory action.
A Seshan, Mumbai (BS)

Big banks block move to free savings rates

NEW DELHI: At a time when interest rates are rising, some of the country's largest banks are trying to block a move to deregulate savings bank rate, fearing their cost would rise beyond 4% in a free market regime.  While the Indian Banks' Association (IBA) had opposed the move earlier, the issue came up for discussion again during the Reserve Bank of India's post-monetary policy meeting with bank chiefs on Tuesday. The bankers-who are split between the larger and smaller players-took up the matter in the evening during the IBA management committee meeting.  Though banks are willing to borrow overnight funds from the RBI at 8%, they are threatening to increase service charges on basic banking services such as use of cheques and ATMs if savings rates are deregulated, which is seen as an acknowledgement of the fact that they are using savings bank balances as subsidized funds. Besides, they are invoking the interests of smaller depositors to make a virtue of continuing with the regulated regime. For instance, a banker said that in a free market regime, those with say Rs 1 lakh or more in his savings bank account would get 6% along with freebies such as unlimited number of cheques. But another person with Rs 50,000 to Rs 1 lakh would earn 5% and with a limited number of free cheques. At the other end would be someone who has Rs 10,000 in his savings bank and would earn 4% and would get only 10 free cheque leaves in a year. Executives with some of the smaller and new banks, which have lower current account-savings bank account (Casa) balances, said if the savings bank rate was freed, they would immediately raise rates. While they concede that banks would pay more in the initial few months, things would settle down as the gap between fixed deposit rates and savings bank rate would shrink. "That's the global experience. So, interest rates would be volatile only in the short run and in any case it would benefit depositors," said a bank executive. At present, SBI pays 7% on term deposits with maturity up to 90 days, which translates into a difference of three percentage points with the savings bank rate. When it comes to a one-year fixed deposit, the difference is 375 basis points as the country's largest bank is offering 7.75% on such deposits. The story is similar across banks.  Bankers said the larger players fear that with new banks expected to come into the picture, the fight for savings bank balances is only going to intensify. "RBI should index the rates to inflation, which can help depositors earn more on their savings bank funds," said a banker.
TOI

RBI action is appropriate to control inflation panic

...With today's policy move, the RBI has clearly shown that it prefers the combination of “7.5 per cent GDP growth and 7 per cent inflation” to “8.5 per cent-plus growth and 9 per cent-plus inflation”. The rate action has a strong probability of faster transmission through lending rates given the rising pressure on cost of funds.....

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Aam Aadmi, don’t throw that rotten egg at Dr Subbarao - R Jagannathan

Wednesday’s newspaper headlines, highlighting the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’s) new muscular approach to squashing inflation, would have made for depressing reading to the aam aadmi. Now, it’s not just my vegetables and milk that are getting costlier, but also my home loan installments and car loans. What have I done to deserve this? Well, there’s no point getting pissed with RBI Governor Duvvuri Subbarao. He is the bad cop who had to step in to fix things when the good cop (the government) is busy living beyond his means. The fundamental problem is this: this government is living beyond its means – spending Rs 12,57,729 crore when it earns Rs 7,89.892 crore, according to the last budget. It has to bridge this gap by borrowing from you. This is one reason why interest rates have to go up. When government borrows too much, it pushes you out of the picture. But like an alcoholic who has had far too much to drink and is still looking for one last swig before dropping into the next gutter, the government wants to spend even more. It wants to give subsidised food to 75 percent of the population in the garb of a Food Security Bill, and higher wages to the rural poor through the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act. This benefits the rural aam aadmi and aurat, but everybody pays the price in the form of higher inflation. Because when the government does not have money, it prints fresh notes to pay its bills. When too much money chases the same amount of food and cereal, you have inflation. The only way to feed the poor is to grow more food, but this can’t happen when you don’t improve agricultural productivity through better irrigation, seeds, fertiliser, and farming techniques. The villain of the piece is thus the government, which is trying to overspend without earning enough. It is eating the seedcorn instead of sowing more to reap a better harvest. And its sins have come back to bite us all in the form of double-digit inflation. The RBI thus has to do the dirty work and cover up for the government’s failures. But even this does not make it a villain. The RBI is actually a do-gooder in villain’s garb. Dear aam aurat, here’s what you gain from Subbarao’s bad cop role. First, raising interest rates is not about hitting you with higher-cost home loans. It also means raising deposit rates. Ask aam dadaji. His bank fixed deposits will earn him more. He should be grinning from ear to ear. Just imagine: currently you get 9.25 percent as the top rate from the State Bank of India when inflation is at 9.44 percent and rising. In essence, you are gifting the money free to the bank, which in turn is gifting it free to the government. By raising interest rates, the RBI is trying to give you a better deal after adjusting for inflation. Subbarao is also trying to hit the government on the head to prevent it from overborrowing on the cheap. When government overborrows, the cost of your money goes up. Second, if high interest rates bring down inflation, you have a double gain. You earn higher rates, and inflation corrodes less of its real value. Third, aam uncle-ji, don’t fret about housing loans. If loan rates are not raised, the realtors will fleece you even more. You benefit when house prices fall, and house prices can fall if loans are NOT cheap. When you are forced to think twice about going to HDFC for that home loan, the realtor knows he has to entice you with something else – maybe a price reduction or some freebies. Your bargaining power improves when interest rates rise. Fourth, don’t forget, builders also have to borrow money. When rates rise, they are pushed harder to sell their stocks of flats in order to reduce their costly borrowings. This again is good for you, if it happens. It may not happen because the builders often run a cartel, and prices are rigged upwards. But you should at least get some psychological pleasure out of knowing that builders are also getting coshed by the RBI’s tough money policy. A corollary: one reason why your dal-roti and veggies cost more is because your middleman trader is hoarding more of it, just like your builder is. By making credit costlier to him, the RBI is trying to nudge him to dehoard and destock. If that does happen, prices can ease a bit. You gain on the swings what you lose on the interest rate roundabout. Fifth, aam bhaiyon aur beheno, let’s understand what rising interest rates are trying to signal to all of us. Higher rates shift money from the pockets of borrowers to savers. Subbarao is thus trying to say, please save more and spend less. Higher rates shift money power from the young (who are usually borrowers) to the old (who are usually savers). But saving more and spending less is not bad advice whether you are young or old. Maybe you should be saving more to borrow less on your next car. Are we saying there is no downside to higher interest rates? Of course, there is. The stock markets will fall. The companies we work for will find demand slowing and profits tapering off. Our salary increments will come under pressure, if business falls. But just as we have to fast for a while when we have had too much to eat the other day at aam aunty’s brother’s wedding, we have to tighten our belts now to make up from all the partying we did from 2003-2010. So hold that virtual rotten tomato you were planning to fling at Subbarao. He is more sinned against than sinning.
Firstpost

FSDC reviews financial stability and economic situation

NEW DELHI: The Financial Stability and Development Council (FSDC) headed by Finance MinisterPranab Mukherjee today reviewed general economic situation in the light of steep rate hike byRBI.  "We have examined the financial stability situation, reviewed the trends and understood each others view points on the fundamentals of economy,"IRDA Chairman J Hari Narayan said after the meeting ofFSDC here.  "The major concerns were relationship between inflation and growth. We are confident that growth trend will continue", he said.  The meeting was attended by all financial sector regulators including IRDA Chairman.  The central bank raised the short-term lending (repo) rate by 50 basis points to 8 per cent and the short-term borrowing (reverse repo) rate by a similar margin to 7 per cent yesterday.  He replied in the affirmative when asked if growth trend will remain despite rate hike.  The central bank, in its quarterly review of the monetary policy, has also revised its fiscal-end inflation projection to 7 per cent from 6 per cent earlier. It has retained the growth project for the current fiscal at 8 per cent.  The FSDC is a high level body for coordination among regulators and looks at financial sector development, financial literacy, financial inclusion and macro-prudential supervision of the economy, including the functioning of large financial conglomerates.
ET

RBI now an ‘inflation targeting' apex bank

...Cross-country evidence suggests that monetary policy has very limited potential to prop up economic activity on a sustained basis. So there is an increasing consensus to allow monetary policy to do what it can do — pursue price stability.....

Ultra hawkish RBI signals further rate rises ahead

Noting that controlling inflation was imperative for sustaining medium and long-term growth and investment momentum, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) raised the repo rate by 50 basis points (taking it to 8 per cent), as against consensus expectations of a 25-basis point rise. RBI also noted the evidence of a broad-based slowdown in growth was not “visible yet”, nor are there any signs of respite from inflationary pressures. The central bank saw numerous risks to inflation, including (i) persistently high global commodity prices; (ii) lagged impact of the domestic fuel price rise in June; (iii) inflationary impact of the recent increase in minimum support prices of agricultural commodities; (iv) prevailing demand side pressures reflected in core inflation remaining above seven per cent, against RBI's comfort range of 4-4.5 per cent; (v) uncertainty relating to the spatial and temporal distribution of the south-west monsoon rainfall; (vi) potential inflationary impact of the higher-than-anticipated fiscal deficit to accommodate for higher fuel subsidies; and (vii) possible rise in coal and consequently, electricity prices in the coming months, in light of the demand-supply situation. On economic activity, RBI said though the growth momentum had moderated in rate-sensitive sectors, a broad-based slowdown had not yet materialised, as the overall consumption trend remained buoyant, supported by increases in real wages.
BS

RBI shock reverberates through newspapers

This morning’s newspapers are dominated by the RBI decision to increase interest rates by 50 basis points yesterday; a move that caught markets by surprise. Almost all of the coverage across the board points to the fact that personal loans will get dearer, while there is some doubt on whether the move will actually contain inflation in addition to affecting growth. Apart from the RBI move, all the major English newspapers also carry pictures of the young and beautiful Pakistani foreign minister Hina Khar Rabbani. However some of the sheen from the visit of the glamorous Ms Rabbani wore off yesterday after news that she had met with Hurriyat leaders in Kashmir. Today it is most probable that style will take a back seat to substance. Finally the aggressive court room actions of former telecom minister A. Raja also feature prominently. In his defence yesterday, Raja called the Comptroller Auditor General “legally illiterate” and said his imprisonment was ‘illegal detention’.
Firstpost 

Rate rise may lead to more defaults: Banks tell RBI

NEW DELHI: Banks have warned the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) that repeated rise in interest rates could push up defaults, especially in case of highly-leveraged firms, infrastructure projects and small scale enterprises. Even individual borrowers are feeling the pressure of higher equated monthly installments (EMIs) on home loans, which have increased 12.5% over the last one year. In several cases, borrowers are now being asked to shell out a lump sum payment as the tenure has gone past 20 years due to the rise in rates. RBI has resorted to increasing key policy rates 11 times in the last 16 months, which has translated into higher lending rates and increase in the monthly instalments for corporates and individuals.  A bank chief said the industrial slowdown, which is affecting the demand projection of companies, and consequently cash flows, was also putting pressure. Besides, input costs have remained at elevated levels and wage bill has gone up considerably over the last 12-18 months. The issue was discussed during RBI's post-monetary policy meeting with bank chiefs on Tuesday. Another banker who attended the meeting at the RBI headquarters on Mumbai's Mint Road said the central bank's assessment was that there was no systemic risk at this point of time. "The net profit-sales ratio has remained around the same level which shows that companies are able to pass on the higher input and debt costs. So the increase can be passed on," he said.  One suggestion was to lower the margin, especially for small-scale units, but bankers said it was a tough ask given that most of them had moved to a risk-base pricing system in the base rate regime. "While it is true that the large corporate gets loans that are closer to the base rate, the small borrower cannot enjoy the same facility as we price loans based on the rating system. The small borrower will always have a lower rating compared to a large corporate," said yet another bank chairman.  RBI has in any case decided against providing any special sops to sectors such as infrastructure where several projects are delayed due to land acquisition or other problems.
TOI

It’s not the last of interest rate hikes, says FM

I don’t think it is end of the tunnel. It is not like that. It does not happen (that way)”, he told reporters, when asked whether RBI is nearing the end of the interest rate increase cycle. When asked whether he was surprised by the 50 basis points increase in key interest rates by the RBI, Mukherjee said, “I cannot say it surprised me. It is substantial no doubt, but given the situation it was necessary”. Admitting that inflation at 9.4 per cent in June was “reasonably high and unacceptable”, Mukherjee said it was a global phenomenon and the whole world was reeling under the impact of rising prices of fuel and other commodities. The government and the central bank are taking steps to check price rise, he said, adding “I am optimistic that measures taken by the RBI by adjusting the crucial rate will have impact and inflation will come down”. The inflation, Mukherjee said, might not come down to below 6-7 per cent by the end current financial year. “We are fighting against inflation...increase in repo and reverse repo by RBI conveys a strong signal... (but) we shall have to keep in mind that year-end inflation may not be less than 6-7 per cent,” he said. In an economy, Mukherjee further said, “you cannot have a carpet under which you can keep all these things and at the same time things will remain stable”. He said crude oil prices went up from US$89 per barrel when the budget calculations were made to US$107-110 currently. He also recalled that India had lived with very high inflation, at 24 per cent in 1974. It was 18 per cent in 1990. The minister said he would take up the issue of volatility in commodity and crude prices at the international fora including G-20. Meanwhile, he said there has been 26 per cent growth in direct tax collection till mid-June while indirect tax collection witnessed a jump of 30 per cent during the period. However, during April-May 2011, the government’s revenue deficit and fiscal deficit turned out to be higher than the levels during the corresponding period of the previous year, reflecting lower revenue receipts and higher expenditure, the RBI had said. Up to July 18, 2011, the government completed 34 per cent of its budgeted net market borrowing programme, as compared with 37 per cent in the corresponding period of last year, it had said. On farm sector he said, “up to now monsoon forecast is encouraging though there are some pockets of deficiencies.. I do hope if agriculture maintains growth momentum ,it will help us in a substantial way”. Besides, he said, there are indications of encouraging hiring activities in corporate sector.
Deccan Herald 

2G case: Siddhartha Behura names RBI Governor

Jailed former Telecom Secretary Siddhartha Behura on Wednesday dragged RBI Governor D Subbarao in the 2G case accusing him of not revising the spectrum licence fee and claimed he had no role to play except implementing the government’s policy.  Opposing the framing of charges of corruption and other penal offences against him in the case, Mr. Behura told the Special CBI judge O.P. Saini that Dr. Subbarao had decided against revising the entry fee of Rs. 1,659 crore for 2G licence and if he is not an accused in this case, he (Behura) too should not have been put on trial. “Subbarao finalised the decision taken in the meeting of December 4, 2007 that the policy stood approved and the entry fees (of Rs. 1,659 crore fixed in 2001 during NDA’s regime) need not be revised,” Mr. Behura’s counsel Aman Lekhi told the court. Mr. Behura is behind bars for the past six months.  “Even the Finance Minister (then P Chidambaram) was also present in the meeting (held on December 4, 2007). If Subbarao, who was part of the Finance Ministry, did commit no wrong, how come I did it? Going by the same principle, if I have been made an accused then Subbarao should also be made an accused,” he said.  The former bureaucrat defended himself against the charges against him, saying the acts done by him were in pursuance of the government policy and he did not commit any wrong that caused a loss to the exchequer.  Asserting that there was “not an iota of evidence” against him, Mr. Behura said he was only a civil servant who had no role to play except implementing the government’s policy.  Mr. Behura told the court that “initially Subbarao recorded his objection (to non revision of entry fee) but later he said that the issue of pricing of the spectrum stood decided.”  “Neither Subbarao nor D S Mathur (former Telecom Secretary nor any other person from any ministry are before this court as accused,” said Behura, adding at best he should have been made a witness and not an accused as he had no role in finalisation of any “covert act” relating to the spectrum allocation.  In arguments that he be discharged in the case, Mr. Behura contended that he joined the telecom ministry in January 2008 and by then all the major policy decisions like those on spectrum pricing, the entry fee and the first-come-first-served policy had already been decided.  “The persons concerned have been made witnesses in the case and unfortunately Behura, who had no role in it, has been made an accused. This is nothing but an arbitrary selection of people as accused and witnesses. CBI has to do a lot of explanation,” Mr. Behura’s counsel said.  The government is entitled to frame a policy in which it gives primacy to some of the aspects, he said adding that a policy cannot be said to be wrong merely because there is more than one opinion on a particular issue about it.  Mr. Behura’s arguments remained inconclusive and would continue on Thursday as some of the accused, including Mr. Raja, were taken to the Patiala House court lock up for their interrogation by Income Tax officials who have come from Chennai.  Mr. Behura was arrested on February 2, 2011 for his alleged involvement in the 2G scam. Under the first charge sheet filed in April 2, he is accused of committing criminal conspiracy, cheating, forgery and criminal misconduct by a public servant.  Mr. Behura had began his submissions on Wednesday after former Telecom Minister A Raja concluded his arguments opposing the framing of charges yesterday.
The Hindu

Keeping banks on their toes

...Pune-based senior citizen Sharad Phadke’s fight has prompted a systemic change after his failed ATM transaction of Rs1,000 was debited from his account but not restored for 65 days by Bank of India (BoI), despite repeated reminders. Here’s how he won....

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