Congress leader P Chidambaram slammed the Modi adminstration over its rocky ties with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). He said that the finance minister and the governor of the apex bank used to work closely when the UPA was in power unlike under the current government.

He also questioned the government’s high GDP growth number when vital economic indicators like household savings, industrial credit, export growth, the value of the Indian Rupee and the creation of employment had slowed down as “never before”.

“The difference between the UPA government and the NDA government with regard to the relation between the finance minister and the RBI governor is the finance minister and the governor used to talk to each other practically every week, meet each other practically every month and work closely with each other in the IMF meetings, in the World Bank meetings and on many other occasions. In the NDA, they don’t work with each other. That’s the difference. There has always been a government point of view and an RBI point of view,” he commented.

Chidambaram, the former union finance minister, also, said there was never a situation, in the past, when section 7 of the RBI Act was threatened to be imposed or the central bank’s board had to meet for nine hours.

The RBI board had a marathon 9-hour-long meeting on Monday amid its standoff with the government over alleged interference in the functioning of the central bank on a host of issues including sharing of surplus reserves.

There were reports that the government had referred to a never-used clause of the RBI Act directing the central bank to implement its wishes. Under Section 7 of the Reserve Bank of India Act of 1934, a direct order can be issued by the government to the central bank to carry out its wishes in “public interest”.

Chidambaram accused the government of “meddling” with the methodology of calculating the GDP numbers. He said despite the economy “limping” along at a growth rate of less than 5 per cent under the impact of demonetisation and a “flawed” GST, the government had ramped it up to 7 per cent.

The Congress leader also attacked Telangana’s TRS government. He asked caretaker Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar Rao to explain the reasons for the failure to implement its poll-time promises of providing three acres of agricultural land to each dalit family, constructing 22 lakh double bedroom houses for the poor and 12 per cent job quotas for religious minorities and scheduled tribes.

“None of these major promises have been delivered. This state of economy in Telangana is best captured by one number. After five years of TRS being in power, Telangana has a debt of 2.2 lakh crore,” he said.

Talking about attempts to forge a broad-based anti-BJP front of opposition parties, the Congress veteran said it was only natural as the BJP-led government at the Centre was “off the track and taking India in the wrong direction”.

“We don’t look at the differences. We look at commonalities (for cobbling together an opposition coalition),” he said.

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