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Economics

90 Years of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)

The Reserve Bank of India recently celebrated its 90th anniversary in Mumbai, a historic milestone. 

About the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

  • The Reserve Bank of India serves as the country’s central bank and monetary authority.
  • It was created on April 1, 1935, under the Reserve Bank of India Act of 1934.
  • It originated from the Hilton Young Commission’s recommendations.
  • Sir Osborne Arkell Smith, an Australian, was the inaugural Governor.
  • He was followed by Sir C D Deshmukh, the first Indian to occupy the post.
  • It is a centralised entity that helps India properly regulate its monetary and credit policies.
  • The RBI’s headquarters were first located in Kolkata before shifting permanently to Mumbai in 1937.
  • The RBI began as a privately held corporation before being fully nationalised in 1949.

Functions and initiatives:

  • Monetary Authority: The RBI manages the economy’s money supply in order to stabilise exchange rates, maintain a healthy balance of payments, and keep inflation under control.
  • Issuer of currency: Sole authority for issuing currency and combating the spread of counterfeit notes. 
  • Banker to the Government: Serves as a banker to both the central and state governments, offering short-term finance and financial advice.
  • Lender of Last Resort: Provides banks with emergency cash during crises.
  • Custodian of Foreign Exchange Reserves: Manages foreign exchange reserves and administers the Foreign Exchange Management Act of 1999 (FEMA).
  • Regulator and Supervisor of Payment and Settlement Systems: Oversees the country’s payment and settlement systems to ensure their efficiency and security.
  • Credit Control and Developmental Role: Increases credit availability to productive sectors and promotes financial infrastructure development. 

Transformative Reforms initiated by the RBI

  • Green Revolution (1960s-1970s): which supported agricultural expansion through credit facilities and improved rural credit accessibility.
  • Bank Nationalisation (1969): Aims to match banking sector objectives with national policy goals.
  • Priority Sector Lending (1972): Ensures timely loan flow to critical sectors of the economy.
  • Economic liberalisation (1991): Opened up the economy to global markets, promoting market-oriented growth.
  • Unified Payment Interface (UPI) 2016: Enabled seamless and instant transactions throughout India.
  • Inflation Targeting Framework (2016): Establish inflation targets to influence monetary policy decisions.
  • Bharat Bill Payment System (BBPS) was launched in 2019 as an integrated bill payment system for the convenience of customers. 
  • Aadhar-based eKYC (2019): Improved customer authentication processes for financial organisations.
  • In 2020, the Emergency loan Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) provided loan support to SMEs hit by the Covid-19 epidemic.
  • The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is considering issuing a CBDC called e₹ (digital rupee) in 2022.
  • Cryptocurrency Regulation (2022): The RBI has taken a consistent stance against cryptocurrencies, arguing for an absolute prohibition (following China and El Salvador’s ban). In 2020, the Supreme Court of India lifted the RBI’s cryptocurrency restriction.
  • Payment Vision 2025 Document (2023) The Payments Vision 2025 publications categorise the RBI’s goals and vision into five anchor goalposts: integrity, inclusion, innovation, institutionalisation, and internationalisation. 
Source: https://www.pmindia.gov.in/en/news_updates/pm-addresses-rbi90-opening-ceremony/?comment=disable#:~:text=Shri%20Modi%20also%20released%20a,enters%20its%2090th%20year%20today.

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