Currencies

India’s central bank approves 2.87 trillion rupee surplus transfer to government


(Corrects last year’s surplus transfer in paragraph 2 to 2.69 trillion rupees from 2.87 trillion rupees; lower end of risk ‌buffer in paragraph 5 to 4.5% from 6.5%)

MUMBAI, May 22 (Reuters) – ‌The Reserve Bank of India’s board has approved the transfer of 2.87 trillion rupees ($29.99 billion) ​as surplus to the federal government for the last fiscal year, it said in a statement on Friday.

The surplus transfer is higher than last year’s record 2.69 trillion rupees.

In the annual budget, the government had accounted for 3.16 ‌trillion rupees in dividends ⁠from the RBI and state-owned financial institutions. New Delhi does not provide an estimate of the dividend from the ⁠central bank alone.

The RBI lowered its contingency risk buffer – funds kept aside to protect the central bank’s finances from volatility – to 6.5% of its balance sheet ​from 7.5% ​in the previous year.

The central bank’s ​economic capital framework allows for ‌a risk buffer of between 4.5% and 7.5%, with a final decision left to its board.

A Reuters poll of economists had pegged the surplus transfer at 2.9 trillion rupees to 3.2 trillion rupees.

The lower-than-expected dividend is likely to hurt bond markets, which are expecting the federal government’s budget ‌deficit to rise.

The government has cut federal ​taxes on fuels to protect domestic consumers from ​the surge in crude ​prices. Expenditure on subsidies for goods such as fertilisers is ‌also expected to rise.

The Reuters poll ​cited above pegged ​the fiscal deficit at 4.7% of gross domestic product this fiscal year, more than last year’s 4.4% and above the government’s 4.3% ​target. Some economists say ‌the deficit could rise to as much as 5% of GDP.

($1 = ​95.6900 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Ira Dugal and Kashish Tandon; Editing ​by Sonia Cheema and Mrigank Dhaniwala)



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