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RBI To Have Additional Instrument For Liquidity Management

The proposal forms part of the Finance Bill 2018 which is scheduled to be approved by Parliament by March 31.

Police sit at the entrance of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) building in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Adeel Halim/Bloomberg)
Police sit at the entrance of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) building in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Adeel Halim/Bloomberg)

The Reserve Bank of India will soon have greater flexibility in terms of managing its liquidity operations with the addition of one more tool 'Standing Deposit Facility Scheme' to its kit.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in his Budget has proposed to amend the RBI Act to empower the central bank to come up with an additional instrument for liquidity management.

The proposal forms part of the Finance Bill 2018 which is scheduled to be approved by Parliament by March 31.

“That is to provide one more tool for liquidity management. There is no more MSS (market stabilisation scheme)," Economic Affairs Secretary S C Garg told wire agency PTI.

The Reserve Bank proposed in November 2015, the introduction of the SDF by suitably amending the RBI Act.

This will provide the RBI a new tool for liquidity management, particularly in times when the money market liquidity is in excess to deal with post-demonetisation like scenario.

Post-demonetisation, the RBI ran out of securities to offer as collateral and had to temporarily hike its cash reserve ratio to force banks to park extra deposits with it.

The CRR is the portion of deposits that banks have to compulsorily park with the RBI. Currently, the CRR is pegged at 4 percent.

When the liquidity position under the Liquidity Adjustment Facility is outside the comfort zone, the RBI uses a array of instruments to absorb/inject durable liquidity from/into the financial system and thus bring the residual liquidity gap—as measured by the outstanding overnight LAF balance—within the comfort zone.

These instruments include the CRR, Open Market Operations and MSS at the moment.

“Introduction of this (SDF) facility would give greater flexibility to the Reserve Bank for managing its liquidity operations,” the RBI had said in its April 2017 ‘Statement on Developmental and Regulatory Policies’.

The Urjit Patel Committee in January 2014 had suggested inclusion of new instruments in the toolkit of monetary policy for absorption of surplus liquidity from the system but without the need for providing collateral in exchange.

The standing deposit facility, the report opined could also be used for sterilisation operations with the advantage that it will not require the provision of collateral for liquidity absorption.

The provision of collateral for liquidity absorption had turned out to be a binding constraint on the reverse repo facility in the face of surges in capital flows during 2005- 08.

The Finance Bill proposes to insert a new clause in the RBI Act to allow it to accept "...money as deposits, repayable with interest from banks or any other person under the Standing Deposit Facility Scheme...for the purposes of liquidity management".

Jaitley in the Budget Speech had said that to provide the central bank an instrument to manage excess liquidity, the RBI Act "is being amended to institutionalise an uncollateralized Deposit Facility".