Yes, in the normal course, there should be close coordination between the two authorities.
This, of course, should be without any one of them undermining the independence of the other.
The economy and all economic entities will gain if the finance ministry and RBI were to see eye to eye on what needs to be done to achieve higher growth with low and stable inflation.
Yet, the question over coordination between the two authorities is now a subject of heated discussion both in North Block, the finance ministry headquarters, and Mint Road, where the RBI head office is located.
This is because the finance ministry is keen on RBI reducing the interest rates, so that the economy's stuttering growth engine gets fresh momentum.
The ministry believes that a hawkish interest rate policy of the past few years has failed to tame inflation and has only succeeded in damaging growth prospects.
So, it is now time to change the policy's direction. Why not reduce rates to supplement the government's recent reformist moves to revive the slowing economy?
RBI has so far remained unimpressed by this argument.
It has expressed concern over the dangers of widening fiscal and current account deficits.
It has noted how inflation is still ruling at around eight per cent, well above its comfort zone.
Worse, it has not seen any significant government move that will restrict the Budgeted fiscal deficit to 5.1 per cent of the gross domestic product in 2012-13.
Even by the finance ministry' internal estimates, the deficit may well cross 5.3 per cent of GDP.
The government is certain to fall short of the target for disinvestment proceeds, pegged at Rs 30,000 crore (Rs 300 billion) and the target for telecom spectrum auction revenues at Rs 40,000 crore (Rs 400 billion) also looks elusive.
Food subsidy Bill for the first half of the current financial year is already 36 per cent more than what was budgeted for the year.
The decision to hike diesel price and cap subsidised cooking gas supplies will make only a small dent on the government's huge subsidies bill, currently estimated at around two per cent of GDP.
With growth slowing, tax revenue collections, too, are a problem.
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