As the economy slows, the Reserve Bank governor will find it tough to keep all the balls in the air in the many roles he performs.
Soon
after taking over as India’s central bank governor almost a year
ago, Shaktikanta
Das decorated his 18th floor office overlooking the Arabian Sea
with two statues of Lord Jagannath, a form of the Hindu god Vishnu.
Revered
in Das’s native Odisha state, Jagannath is depicted with round,
lidless eyes that are always watching over the welfare of devotees.
It’s an appropriate adornment.
Das,
overseeing what was until recently the world’s fastest-growing
major economy, has worked tirelessly to restore relations with the
government after a bitter public spat led his predecessor Urjit Patel
to quit. Colleagues say Das usually tucks papers under his arms at
the end of the work day to continue plugging away from home.
He’s
paid a hefty dividend to the finance ministry, swung into stimulus
mode and eased up on bank lending restrictions—all of which Patel
resisted in the face of government pressure. But there’s still much
to do: the economy is losing steam on many fronts, the banking sector
remains saddled with one of the world’s worst bad-debt loads and
the government’s fiscal targets are slipping by the day.
Insiders
say Das has turned around the mood in the bank’s Mumbai
headquarters with an affable, plain-spoken approach. As one official
said: He listens to everyone and then sticks to his own decision.
Among
the RBI rank and file, the more academically-decorated predecessors
of Patel and Raghuram
Rajan were considered outsiders due to their long stints in
American academia. Long-timers were put offside as in-house talent
was often bypassed in senior appointments. Not with Das: in the job
posting for a deputy in-charge of monetary policy, at least 25 years
of government experience within India tops the priority list among
requirements for the role.
Rajan
and Patel were contrasting personalities—Rajan the rockstar of
global central banking and Patel reclusive both inside and outside
the bank. Silver-haired Das strikes a balance. He has his own Twitter
account and is more open to the media, giving interviews to local and
foreign media including Bloomberg News. But he hasn’t taken to the
global stage in the way Rajan did, such as when he led criticism of
the Federal Reserve in 2014 for not taking into account the
spillovers of its policies on emerging markets.
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