Context:
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is likely to transfer a record ₹3 lakh crore surplus to the central government for FY25. This is 50% higher than FY24’s ₹2.1 lakh crore transfer and well above the budget estimate of ₹2.3 lakh crore.
What is RBI Surplus?
- Surplus = RBI’s income – expenditure
- RBI generates surplus primarily from:
- Interest on Rupee Securities (RS)
- Earnings from Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) and Marginal Standing Facility (MSF)
- Interest on loans to central/state governments and banks
- Interest from Foreign Currency Assets (FCA)
Key Expenditure Items of RBI
- Risk Provisions:
- Contingency Fund (CF): For absorbing market and operational risks.
- Asset Development Fund (ADF): For internal capital expenditure and investments in subsidiaries.
- Other Expenditures:
- Printing of currency
- Commission to banks, dealers
- Employee costs
Provisions & Legal Basis
- Section 47, RBI Act, 1934: RBI must transfer surplus to the Central Government after risk provisions.
- Section 48: RBI is exempt from income and super tax.
- Committees that guided surplus transfers:
- V Subrahmanyam (1997)
- Usha Thorat (2004)
- Y.H. Malegam (2013)
- Bimal Jalan Committee (2018) → Finalized the Revised Economic Capital Framework (ECF)
Economic Capital Framework (ECF) – Key Metrics
- Realized Equity (CF):
- Range: 5.5–6.5% of RBI’s balance sheet.
- RBI Board decided to maintain it at 5.5%.
- Economic Capital (includes CGRA):
- Range: 20.8–25.4% of balance sheet.
- Excess above upper limit is transferrable.
- CGRA = Unrealized valuation gains from forex, gold, interest rate movements.
Why Was the Surplus So High?
- Higher earnings from foreign exchange reserves
- Lower provisioning requirement under revised risk thresholds
- Strong returns on domestic and global investments
Historical RBI Surplus Payouts (₹ Cr)
Fiscal Year | Surplus Transferred |
---|---|
FY16 | 65,876 |
FY17 | 30,659 |
FY18 | 50,000 |
FY19 | 1,75,987 |
FY20 | 57,128 |
FY21 | 99,122 |
FY22 | 30,307 |
FY23 | 87,416 |
FY24 | 2,10,874 |
Benefits to the Government
- Reduce Fiscal Deficit: Supports achieving FY25 target of 5.1%.
- Enhances Non-Tax Revenue: Provides fiscal space for welfare and growth expenditures.
- Lower Government Borrowing:
- May cut FY25 borrowing by ₹1 trillion.
- Reduces pressure on bond markets and yields.
- Keeps Interest Rates Low:
- Lower G-Sec yields → lower corporate borrowing costs → boosts investment.