The 'Wise Owl' of Mint Street: Urjit Patel completes two years as RBI Governor

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
New Delhi: There is a new twist to the British economist John Keanes' famous quote that 'it is your problem if you owe a hundred bucks to a
bank, but it is the bank's problem if you owe a million' -- the problem is of the central banker if unpaid loans run into billions. And to
clear this 'landmine', which has been blamed on the previous UPA regime by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, RBI Governor Urjit Patel decided to
follow "wisdom of an owl" as he went on to conduct the "deep surgery" initiated by his predecessor Raghuram Rajan to clamp down on loan
defaulters, while seeking to safeguard the Indian banking system from any collateral damage. As Patel completes two years in office as the
RBI Governor, the jury is still out whether he has been a 'hawk' -- as prescribed by many economists to contain inflationary pressures and
to tame the monster of loan defaults -- or a 'dove' as others, including those in the government, wanted him to always cut rates to boost
growth. In the meantime, Patel has been steadfast in maintaining the central bank's independence and in handling the bad loan cases and
has lately also earned the praise of the Opposition, with the RBI recently disclosing final figures for all junked currency deposited after
the government's demoentisation decision, within weeks of him assuming charge in 2016, for which he had also got a good share of flak,
bankers and industrialists said while recalling their meetings with him. Despite often being called reticent, Dr Patel -- as he has been
often referred to -- has also been speaking up his mind through his lectures and articles, at his regular post-policy press meets and also
before parliamentary panels, while officials at the RBI say his main focus has always been on implementing things. Within days of the
demonetisation move also, when he was being criticised by one and all for not speaking up, Patel had told PTI in an interview in November
2016 that the central bank was taking all necessary actions to "ease the genuine pain of citizens" with a clear intent to normalise the
things as early as possible. As per the RBI itself, it put in place an elaborate exercise for withdrawing junked notes and introducing new
ones and the process involved people "working in two shifts under strenuous conditions, maintaining detailed records and planning
effectively without compromising on other functions of currency management". As the 'remonetisation' exercise continued, Patel was seen
living up to his own words about what it is required to be at the RBI to remain vigilant and to be wise like an owl -- "An owl is
traditionally a symbol of wisdom
So, we are neither doves nor hawks, but owls and we are vigilant when others are resting". With one more year to go in his current
three-year tenure that began on September 4, 2016, Patel is being seen by the RBI watchers as being firmly in the saddle on regulations of
banks, the monetary policy framework and the all-important handling of the NPA situation, among various other tasks he has. On so-called
frictions between the RBI and the government, a senior banker said this relation has always been so and it was summed up perfectly by former
RBI Governor D Subbarao when he narrated an incident involving his predecessor Y V Reddy who kept saying "No, no, no, no, no, yes, no, no,
no" while talking to someone over phone. Later, Reddy disclosed he was talking to the then finance minister and his only 'yes' was in reply
to a question on whether he was able to hear him. And in case of Patel, the RBI has also been working alongside the government on various
fronts including the ambitious goals like doubling farmers' income, boost to digital payments and providing easier funding to MSMEs. Within
a month of Patel taking over the top job at the RBI, the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) framework was introduced to decide on rates and has
been functioning decisively since then on its primary objective of inflation targeting, experts say. Another important direction from the
RBI early in Patel's tenure has been to credit information companies to provide access to a free full credit report to
individuals. Patel's tenure has also seen the RBI working on new guidelines for tackling cyber security concerns, as also pre-emptive
cautionary warnings and directions on evolving challenges posed by cryptocurrencies. The RBI has also set up a new Enforcement Department as
part of broader plan to develop a rule-based approach to deal with breaches of law, rules and directions and to make the enforcement process
stringent and consistent. As the financial health of banks had deteriorated over the last few years, the RBI has revised norms for prompt
corrective action and promptly imposed them on some public sector lenders
The new framework encourages banks to eschew certain riskier activities and focus on conserving capital so that their balance sheets can
become stronger. While industry estimates peg overall NPAs at over Rs 10 lakh crore, the RBI has said the stressed assets (gross NPAs plus
restructured standard advances) remained elevated at 12.1 per cent of gross advances at end-March 2018. The RBI has also introduced measures
to make banking easier for public, including for senior citizens and differently-abled persons. It has launched an aggressive awareness
campaign on banking regulations and against frauds and introduced a structured communication channel called 'Mint Street Memo'
It got global praise for its communication activities from the bank for International Settlements.