Speculation has been rife over whether Rajan, an
acclaimed IMF economist known to have predicted the 2008 global financial crisis, would get a second term after BJP leader Subramanian Swamy launched a no-holds barred attack on him recently accusing him of destroying economy with his hawkish stance on interest rates.
Swamy had also questioned whether Rajan was "mentally, fully Indian" as he holds a US Green Card, among other allegations.
Rajan also rued that his work was "yet to be completed"
on two significant matters -- containing inflation and cleaning up the books of banks -- and he "was open to seeing these developments through".
But, he decided to return to academia after the end of his current term "on due reflection, and after consultation with the government", the on-leave Professor of Finance at Chicago University said, without giving any specific reason.
While the Governor did not specifically refer to this, but said in his letter that the RBI would be able to "ride out imminent sources of market volatility like the threat of Brexit."
He also said that RBI has "made adequate preparations for the repayment of Foreign Currency Non-Resident (B) deposits and their outflow, managed properly, should largely be a non-event", referring to the concerns that the maturity of these bonds in September-October could impact the markets in terms of sudden pressure on the country's forex reserves.
The Governor said he is confident that his successor would take the RBI to new heights.
"I am an academic and I have always made it clear that my ultimate home is in the realm of ideas. The approaching end of my three year term, and of my leave at the University of Chicago, was therefore a good time to reflect on how much we had accomplished.
"Moreover, the bank clean up initiated under the Asset Quality Review, having already brought more credibility to bank balance sheets, is still ongoing. International developments also pose some risks in the short term.
"While I was open to seeing these developments through, on due reflection, and after consultation with the government, I want to share with you that I will be returning to academia when my term as Governor ends on September 4, 2016. I will, of course, always be available to serve my country when needed.
candid views on various issues including the tolerance debate and his 'one eyed is king among blinds' remark.
In his message, Rajan reflected on his three years at the helm of the central bank, tracing the journey from taking over the governorship in 2013 under difficult circumstances when the country was in "Fragile Five" with high inflation and intense pressure on the rupee.
"At that time, the currency was plunging daily, inflation was high, and growth was weak. India was then deemed one of the 'Fragile Five'," he said and quoted from his opening statement which spoke of opening a special deposit window from the diaspora to tide over the crisis.
Rajan also mentioned the other measures he had spoken about, including inflation-targeting, introducing new kind of banks and taking universal ones on-tap and addressing the asset quality stress through a data base.
(REOPENS DEL26)
At the end of his three-year tenure, Rajan would become the first RBI Governor since 1992 to have a term of less than five years.
His predecessors--D Subbarao (2008-13), YV Reddy (2003-08), Bimal Jalan (1997-2003) and C Rangarajan (1992-97) - all had five-year (three plus two) terms or more.
The academic in him had come to the fore very often to speak on a range of issues from tolerance to ideas to the government's pet flagship programmes to GDP computation through his many public speeches, which rubbed the ruling establishment the wrong way.
Pointing out to the over USD 360 billion forex kitty, Rajan said it is a record high and reiterated confidence of comfortably weathering the NRI deposit repayments due soon without any hitches.
Rajan, however, tried hard to convince that they wanted to help establish a credibility to RBI's ability to reign-in inflation and once he was confident of the shift in the trajectory, started lowering the rates.
In the letter, Rajan, who was dubbed a rock star by the media and was the darling of foreign economists and analysts, said the RBI has cut the key rates by 1.50 per cent since taking the accomodatory stance in January 2015.
Rajan said the enabling framework for National Payments Corporation of India to roll out the Universal Payment Interface will soon "revolutionize mobile to mobile payments" in the country.
Rajan, who introduced a slew of measures on the liquidity front, also counted the issue of 40-year government bond as an achievement.
The letter did not mention much on change in RBI's functioning but said, "the RBI has gone through a restructuring and streamlining, designed and driven by our own senior staff."
Foreign fund managers like Marc Faber and Jim Rogers were public in describing Rajan as one of the best central bankers across the world, while a number of industry leaders back home including N R Narayana Murthy have been pitching for a second term for him.
"One of the advantages that India has other than having the lot of smarter people is that Rajan is probably the best central banker in the world, or at least the least bad central banker in the world," Jim Rogers of Rogers Holdings recently said.
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