Rajan said the process of dialogue with the government did not reach a stage where he could have agreed to stay on
Terming political attacks on him as abominable, outgoing Reserve Bank of India governor Raghuram Rajan said, on Wednesday, that he was open to staying a bit longer to complete the unfinished work of bank clean up, but is perfectly happy to go.
Rajan, who had in June decided against seeking a second term after the 3-year tenure, which ends next month, said the process of dialogue with the government did not reach a stage where he could have agreed to stay on.
He said, however, that he was never worried about reappointment or a future career in the government and did the best in the interest of the country and he was the "best team player".
Rajan, who plans to return to academia after his term ends on September 4, said his stay at the university made him "pretty thick skinned", but the attacks then were not abominable.
“Some of these (recent) attacks were abominable, that is imputing sort of motives, alleging things completely without any basis," he told CNBC-TV18, adding that he put them aside and did not pay any attention to them.
Towards the end of his three-year tenure, Rajan faced personal attacks from Bharatiya Janata Party MP Subramanian Swamy who had alleged that the former International Monetary Fund chief economist was "mentally not fully Indian" and sent confidential and sensitive financial information abroad.
Rajan said when people asked him if he was open to the second term, he said that although he had structured all his initiatives at RBI with a three-year horizon, there were some unfinished works like PSU banks' balance sheet clean-up and setting up of monetary policy committee framework.
"That does not mean in any way, that I was absolutely hell bent on having a second term," he said. "I was open for staying a little while longer to see them complete, but at the same time I was perfectly happy to go."
Rajan said 90-95 per cent of the job that he had taken on was complete and he had absolute freedom in doing his work.
On his future plans, he said: "I have said again and again, I am fundamentally an academician. This (RBI Governor) is my side job."