"RBI board has approved the broad contours of the restructuring plan, including the creation of a position of a COO," the central bank said in response to a query from ET. The new position may not be ranked at
The board’s approval for his plan is a boost for Rajan, who has already taken steps to transform monetary policy-making by adopting the inflation-targeting framework suggested by his deputy Urjit Patel. This approach is cited as the reason for the two decades of prosperity before the 2008 credit crisis. Although the government has not yet formally approved this, statements from
The creation of the new post will be discussed further with the government as it will require legislative changes. "Since that position is intended to be at the DG (deputy governor) level, the position’s status will have to be discussed further with the government, and then will require legislative change," said RBI. The COO will probably be entrusted with implementing the ambitious reforms that Rajan wants, including pushing financial inclusion, differentiated banks and developing new structures for
It will not interfere with the existing structures that administer banks and financial markets, the person said. Rajan spoke highly of Mor in comments to ET when he chose him to head the financial inclusion panel last year.
"We could not pick up a better and more capable person who has seen all aspects – the theoretical as well as the practical -- to give us a sense of the future of what we should be doing," Rajan had said.
Rajan’s broader plan includes bringing every aspect of the central bank under just five functional departments that will be supervised by the four deputy governors and the COO.
Some departments such as the supervision and inspection departments of banks as well as non-banking