RBI Governor Calls for Collaborative Supervision, Not Adversarial Regulation

RBI Governor Malhotra emphasized that regulation is most effective when banks view supervisors as partners in resilience rather than adversarial inspectors. He clarified that enforcement actions are primarily corrective, serving to signal standards and close regulatory gaps. The Governor stressed that both regulators and regulated entities share the same goal of ensuring the financial system's long-term growth and stability. He called for a move beyond a tick-box compliance culture to truly understanding the spirit of regulation, especially concerning new digital risks.

Key Points: RBI Governor: Supervisors as Partners, Not Inspectors

  • Collaborative supervision over fault-finding
  • Enforcement aims to correct, not punish
  • Supervision should help refine regulations
  • Balance growth with systemic stability
  • Move beyond tick-box compliance culture
3 min read

Regulation works best when banks see supervisors as partners, not inspectors: RBI Governor

RBI Governor Malhotra advocates for a collaborative regulatory approach, emphasizing correction over punishment for a stable, vibrant financial sector.

"We in RBI view our regulatory and supervisory roles vis-a-vis the regulated entities as collaborative and not adversarial. - Governor Malhotra"

Mumbai, January 9

The Reserve Bank of India Governor on Friday said the regulation works best when banks and other regulated entities view supervisors not as fault-finding inspectors, but as partners in resilience.

While speaking at the Third Annual Global Conference of the College of Supervisors in Mumbai, Governor Malhotra said, "For a country like India, where banks play a critical role in financial intermediation and inclusive growth, this collaborative approach is not just desirable, it is essential."

Talking about the RBI's actions on banks and other regulated entities, the governor said the purpose of enforcement actions undertaken by the Reserve Bank is generally not punitive.

"The intent is largely to correct. They serve two purposes which are signal to those against whom such measures have been initiated; and make others aware of our acceptable standards of conduct and expectations," he highlighted.

He said the supervision should not only enforce existing regulations, but also help refine them by flagging regulatory gaps and inconsistencies observed during supervisory engagements.

"The amendments to the co-lending directions and lending against gold & silver jewellery last year were few recent examples," he said.

"We in RBI view our regulatory and supervisory roles vis-a-vis the regulated entities as collaborative and not adversarial. We measure our success as a regulator not only in terms of stability but also the dynamism and vibrancy in the financial sector. Similarly, for the regulated entities to succeed in the long term, stability is essential," RBI Governor said.

"Essentially, the objectives and purposes of the regulator and the regulated are the same viz. to ensure the long term growth, advancement, stability, integrity, and credibility of the financial system. The regulators and the regulated are in the same team and not opposite camps. We are partners in the nation's development. Therefore, we have to work together to strike the right balance between growth and systemic stability on the one hand and between responsible innovation and consumer protection on the other hand," he added.

The RBI Governor noted that the supervisory action and enforcement are often viewed as the most visible aspect of regulation and supervision. "It is therefore important to clarify that such actions by the Reserve Bank must be seen as part of a continuum of supervisory tools, not as a standalone response," he said.

Giving a message to the regulated entities, Governor Malhotra said they need to better understand regulatory expectations and requirements, particularly in the areas where models, partners, data, and digital delivery create new forms of risk. "They need to imbibe the essence of regulation and follow the spirit of it and not merely follow a tick-box based compliance culture."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priyanka N
The point about moving away from "tick-box compliance" is crucial. Real understanding of regulations, not just blind following, is what will prevent future NPAs and scams. Hope bank managements are listening.
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Aman W
Good words, but actions speak louder. Many small businesses still face arbitrary loan rejections or excessive scrutiny from banks who are scared of RBI inspections. The "corrective, not punitive" intent needs to trickle down to the branch level.
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Sarah B
As someone working in fintech, the balance between "responsible innovation and consumer protection" is the key challenge. Glad to see RBI acknowledging it. A collaborative approach can help India lead in digital finance without the pitfalls seen elsewhere.
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Vikram M
Absolutely right. The stability of our banks is non-negotiable for the common man's savings and for economic growth. When RBI and banks work as one team, the entire nation wins. More power to this thinking!
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Kiran H
Partnership is a two-way street. While RBI is extending a hand, banks must also proactively engage, flag issues, and suggest improvements. The examples of co-lending and gold loan directions show this can work. A positive shift in regulatory culture.

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