Government of National Capital Territory of Delhi (GNCTD) has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Reserve Bank of India, bringing Delhi under the RBI’s full banking, cash management and public debt framework for the first time.
This marks a historic shift in Delhi’s financial governance, aligning it with the structured fiscal management framework followed by Indian states.
Key Highlights of MoU
- RBI’s Role Expanded
- RBI will act as:
- Official Banker
- Debt Manager
- Financial Agent
for the Government of Delhi.
- Centralises borrowing operations, cash-flow monitoring, and treasury management under one professional authority.
- RBI will act as:
- First-Time Structured Framework
- Earlier, Delhi’s banking and borrowing operations were fragmented and not fully integrated with RBI oversight.
- The MoU introduces professional, transparent and disciplined fiscal management.
Borrowing Framework under RBI Oversight
State Development Loans (SDLs)
- Delhi can now raise funds through State Development Loans, a standard market borrowing instrument used by states.
- Impact on borrowing costs:
- Earlier borrowing costs: 12–13%
- Expected SDL rates: ~7%
- Result: Lower interest burden and improved debt sustainability.
Liquidity Support Mechanisms
- Access to:
- Ways and Means Advances (WMA) – short-term liquidity support
- Special Drawing Facility (SDF) – additional low-cost liquidity
- Helps manage temporary mismatches between receipts and payments without high-cost emergency borrowing.
Cash Management Reforms
- Automatic investment of surplus cash
- Idle balances will be professionally invested instead of remaining unused.
- Daily cash-flow monitoring
- Ensures efficient utilisation of public funds.
- Reduced interest losses
- Better timing and planning of borrowings and expenditures.
Separation of Public Accounts- A Structural Reform
- A Central Government notification (January) formally separated:
- Delhi’s public accounts
from - Government of India’s accounts
- Delhi’s public accounts
- Significance:
- Gives Delhi an independent banking and borrowing identity
- Places its finances on a separate administrative footing, similar to states.
Why This MoU Matters
- Fiscal Discipline: Structured debt and cash management under RBI supervision
- Transparency: Centralised oversight improves accountability
- Efficiency: Lower borrowing costs and optimal use of surplus funds
- Investor Confidence: Professional debt management improves market perception
- Governance Reform: Corrects a long-standing anomaly despite Delhi being the national capital
The move aligns Delhi with international best practices in public finance management.
Broader Context
- Indian states face increasing pressure to:
- Maintain fiscal discipline
- Fund infrastructure and welfare programmes
- With RBI managing finances, the Delhi government can focus on:
- Policy priorities
- Infrastructure development
- Social sector spending
while technical financial operations are handled professionally.
Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
- India’s central bank, established in 1935
- Functions:
- Banker to the Union and State Governments
- Manager of public debt
- Controller of monetary policy
- Provides:
- Cash management services
- Market borrowing support
- Liquidity facilities (WMA, SDF)
State Development Loans (SDLs)
- Market-based borrowing instruments issued by states
- Managed by RBI
- Used for:
- Financing fiscal deficits
- Capital expenditure
- Typically lower-cost and more disciplined than ad-hoc borrowing