Kindly Take Note : Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is the central bank of
the country and is different from Central Bank of India.
The central bank of the country is the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). It
was established in April 1935 with a share capital of Rs. 5 crores on
the basis of the recommendations of the Hilton Young Commission. The
share capital was divided into shares of Rs. 100 each fully paid which
was entirely owned by private shareholders in the begining. The
Government held shares of nominal value of Rs. 2,20,000.
Reserve Bank of India was nationalised in the year 1949. The general
superintendence and direction of the Bank is entrusted to Central Board
of Directors of 20 members, the Governor and four Deputy Governors, one
Government official from the Ministry of Finance, ten nominated
Directors by the Government to give representation to important elements
in the economic life of the country, and four nominated Directors by the
Central Government to represent the four local Boards with the
headquarters at Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai and New Delhi. Local Boards
consist of five members each Central Government appointed for a term of
four years to represent territorial and economic interests and the
interests of co-operative and indigenous banks.
The Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 was commenced on April 1, 1935. The
Act, 1934 (II of 1934) provides the statutory basis of the functioning
of the Bank.
The Bank was constituted for the need of following:
- To regulate the issue of banknotes
- To maintain reserves with a view to securing monetary stability
and
- To operate the credit and currency system of the country to its
advantage.
Functions of Reserve Bank of India
The Reserve Bank of India Act of 1934 entrust all the important
functions of a central bank the Reserve Bank of India.
Bank of Issue
Under Section 22 of the Reserve Bank of India Act, the Bank has the
sole right to issue bank notes of all denominations. The distribution of
one rupee notes and coins and small coins all over the country is
undertaken by the Reserve Bank as agent of the Government. The Reserve
Bank has a separate Issue Department which is entrusted with the issue
of currency notes. The assets and liabilities of the Issue Department
are kept separate from those of the Banking Department. Originally, the
assets of the Issue Department were to consist of not less than
two-fifths of gold coin, gold bullion or sterling securities provided
the amount of gold was not less than Rs. 40 crores in value. The
remaining three-fifths of the assets might be held in rupee coins,
Government of India rupee securities, eligible bills of exchange and
promissory notes payable in India. Due to the exigencies of the Second
World War and the post-was period, these provisions were considerably
modified. Since 1957, the Reserve Bank of India is required to maintain
gold and foreign exchange reserves of Ra. 200 crores, of which at least
Rs. 115 crores should be in gold. The system as it exists today is known
as the minimum reserve system.
Banker to Government
The second important function of the Reserve Bank of India is to act as
Government banker, agent and adviser. The Reserve Bank is agent of
Central Government and of all State Governments in India excepting that
of Jammu and Kashmir. The Reserve Bank has the obligation to transact
Government business, via. to keep the cash balances as deposits free of
interest, to receive and to make payments on behalf of the Government
and to carry out their exchange remittances and other banking
operations. The Reserve Bank of India helps the Government - both the
Union and the States to float new loans and to manage public debt. The
Bank makes ways and means advances to the Governments for 90 days. It
makes loans and advances to the States and local authorities. It acts as
adviser to the Government on all monetary and banking matters.
Bankers' Bank and Lender of the Last Resort
The Reserve Bank of India acts as the bankers' bank. According to the
provisions of the Banking Companies Act of 1949, every scheduled bank
was required to maintain with the Reserve Bank a cash balance equivalent
to 5% of its demand liabilites and 2 per cent of its time liabilities in
India. By an amendment of 1962, the distinction between demand and time
liabilities was abolished and banks have been asked to keep cash
reserves equal to 3 per cent of their aggregate deposit liabilities. The
minimum cash requirements can be changed by the Reserve Bank of India.
The scheduled banks can borrow from the Reserve Bank of India on the
basis of eligible securities or get financial accommodation in times of
need or stringency by rediscounting bills of exchange. Since commercial
banks can always expect the Reserve Bank of India to come to their help
in times of banking crisis the Reserve Bank becomes not only the
banker's bank but also the lender of the last resort.
Controller of Credit
The Reserve Bank of India is the controller of credit i.e. it has the
power to influence the volume of credit created by banks in India. It
can do so through changing the Bank rate or through open market
operations. According to the Banking Regulation Act of 1949, the Reserve
Bank of India can ask any particular bank or the whole banking system
not to lend to particular groups or persons on the basis of certain
types of securities. Since 1956, selective controls of credit are
increasingly being used by the Reserve Bank.
The Reserve Bank of India is armed with many more powers to control the
Indian money market. Every bank has to get a licence from the Reserve
Bank of India to do banking business within India, the licence can be
cancelled by the Reserve Bank of certain stipulated conditions are not
fulfilled. Every bank will have to get the permission of the Reserve
Bank before it can open a new branch. Each scheduled bank must send a
weekly return to the Reserve Bank showing, in detail, its assets and
liabilities. This power of the Bank to call for information is also
intended to give it effective control of the credit system. The Reserve
Bank has also the power to inspect the accounts of any commercial bank.
As supereme banking authority in the country, the Reserve Bank of
India, therefore, has the following powers:
(a) It holds the cash reserves of all the scheduled banks.
(b) It controls the credit operations of banks through quantitative and
qualitative controls.
(c) It controls the banking system through the system of licensing,
inspection and calling for information.
(d) It acts as the lender of the last resort by providing rediscount
facilities to scheduled banks.
Custodian of Foreign Reserves
The Reserve Bank of India has the responsibility to maintain the
official rate of exchange. According to the Reserve Bank of India Act of
1934, the Bank was required to buy and sell at fixed rates any amount of
sterling in lots of not less than Rs. 10,000. The rate of exchange fixed
was Re. 1 = sh. 6d. Since 1935 the Bank was able to maintain the
exchange rate fixed at lsh.6d. though there were periods of extreme
pressure in favour of or against
the rupee. After India became a member of the International Monetary
Fund in 1946, the Reserve Bank has the responsibility of maintaining
fixed exchange rates with all other member countries of the I.M.F.
Besides maintaining the rate of exchange of the rupee, the Reserve Bank
has to act as the custodian of India's reserve of international
currencies. The vast sterling balances were acquired and managed by the
Bank. Further, the RBI has the responsibility of administering the
exchange controls of the country.
Supervisory functions
In addition to its traditional central banking functions, the Reserve
bank has certain non-monetary functions of the nature of supervision of
banks and promotion of sound banking in India. The Reserve Bank Act,
1934, and the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 have given the RBI wide
powers of supervision and control over commercial and co-operative
banks, relating to licensing and establishments, branch expansion,
liquidity of their assets, management and methods of working,
amalgamation, reconstruction, and liquidation. The RBI is authorised to
carry out periodical inspections of the banks and to call for returns
and necessary information from them. The nationalisation of 14 major
Indian scheduled banks in July 1969 has imposed new responsibilities on
the RBI for directing the growth of banking and credit policies towards
more rapid development of the economy and realisation of certain desired
social objectives. The supervisory functions of the RBI have helped a
great deal in improving the standard of banking in India to develop on
sound lines and to improve the methods of their operation.
Promotional functions
With economic growth assuming a new urgency since Independence, the
range of the Reserve Bank's functions has steadily widened. The Bank now
performs a varietyof developmental and promotional functions, which, at
one time, were regarded as outside the normal scope of central banking.
The Reserve Bank was asked to promote banking habit, extend banking
facilities to rural and semi-urban areas, and establish and promote new
specialised financing agencies. Accordingly, the Reserve Bank has helped
in the setting up of the IFCI and the SFC; it set up the Deposit
Insurance Corporation in 1962, the Unit Trust of India in 1964, the
Industrial Development Bank of India also in 1964, the Agricultural
Refinance Corporation of India in 1963 and the Industrial Reconstruction
Corporation of India in 1972. These institutions were set up directly or
indirectly by the Reserve Bank to promote saving habit and to mobilise
savings, and to provide industrial finance as well as agricultural
finance. As far back as 1935, the Reserve Bank of India set up the
Agricultural Credit Department to provide agricultural credit. But only
since 1951 the Bank's role in this field has become extremely important.
The Bank has developed the co-operative credit movement to encourage
saving, to eliminate moneylenders from the villages and to route its
short term credit to agriculture. The RBI has set up the Agricultural
Refinance and Development Corporation to provide long-term finance to
farmers.
Classification of RBIs functions
The monetary functions also known as the central banking functions of
the RBI are related to control and regulation of money and credit, i.e.,
issue of currency, control of bank credit, control of foreign exchange
operations, banker to the Government and to the money market. Monetary
functions of the RBI are significant as they control and regulate the
volume of money and credit in the country.
Equally important, however, are the non-monetary functions of the RBI
in the context of India's economic backwardness. The supervisory
function of the RBI may be regarded as a non-monetary function (though
many consider this a monetary function). The promotion of sound banking
in India is an important goal of the RBI, the RBI has been given wide
and drastic powers, under the Banking Regulation Act of 1949 - these
powers relate to licencing of banks, branch expansion, liquidity of
their assets, management and methods of working, inspection,
amalgamation, reconstruction and liquidation. Under the RBI's
supervision and inspection, the working of banks has greatly improved.
Commercial banks have developed into financially and operationally sound
and viable units. The RBI's powers of supervision have now been extended
to non-banking financial intermediaries. Since independence,
particularly after its nationalisation 1949, the RBI has followed the
promotional functions vigorously and has been responsible for strong
financial support to industrial and agricultural development in the
country.
RESERVE BANK OF INDIA ADDRESS
Reserve Bank of India,
Central Office,
Shaheed Bhagat Singh Road,
Mumbai - 400 001.
Website of Reserve Bank of India
www.rbi.org.in