REUTERS-The employee
union of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has urged the bank's governor to
protect central bank autonomy and not allow the federal
government to interfere
in processes, after criticism over how it handled a ban on high-value currency.
The bank and
Prime Minister Narendra Modi have been criticized for the implementation of
their November decision to abolish high-value bills that accounted for 86
percent of currency in circulation.
Economists
said slow replacement of the bills undermined the RBI's reputation for
competence, while some raised doubts about the bank's independence for agreeing
to implementation with limited preparation.
The RBI's
employee union in a letter to the governor dated Jan. 13 said it was
"painful" the central bank was being criticized despite its staff
successfully carrying out the "humongous task" of replacing the old
bills.
It cited a
recent local media report saying the finance ministry had sent a bureaucrat to
coordinate the bank's cash operations.
"If
true, this is most unfortunate and we take strong exception to this measure of
the government as impinging on RBI autonomy," the union said in the
letter. The RBI did not require any assistance, it said.
"Apart
from showing RBI operations and its gigantic performance in poor light, the
government now blatantly encroaches on its jurisdiction," the union said
in the letter, a copy of which was seen by Reuters.
An RBI union
member confirmed the authenticity of the letter. The RBI did not provide an
immediate comment. A finance ministry spokesman declined to comment.
Modi's
decision on Nov. 8 to suddenly scrap 500 and 1,000 rupee banknotes as part of a
crackdown on tax dodgers and counterfeiters has resulted in severe cash
shortages, impacting companies, farmers and households alike.
The action
has also sparked political concern, with some people in Modi's own party
anxious that the cash crunch could hurt their prospects in states going to the
polls this year.
One RBI
official involved in drafting the union's letter said employees were worried
that government intervention in distributing new bills could be politically
influenced ahead of state polls.
REUTERS
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