• May 21, 2026
The Reserve Bank of India will again make a record surplus transfer to the government for this April-to-March fiscal year, a windfall that economists polled by Reuters said would not be sufficient to prevent New Delhi from missing ​its fiscal deficit target.
The RBI, which is due on Friday to report how much it will hand over ‌to the Treasury, is expected to transfer a sizable amount this year, in large part from profitable U.S. dollar sales after it intervened in the foreign exchange market to stem the rupee’s slide.
A poll of 25 economists taken on May 19 and 20 showed the RBI is likely to transfer ​a record dividend of 2.9 trillion rupees to 3.2 trillion rupees ($30.0 billion to $33.1 billion) to the Treasury, matching the ​government’s forecast in this fiscal year’s budget.
A slim majority, 12 of 22, said the Treasury is becoming ⁠too reliant on these transfers, which have surged 55-fold over the past two decades.
Under recently revised rules that were originally laid ​out in 2019, the RBI is recommended to maintain a contingency reserve of 4.5% to 7.5% of its balance sheet and transfer the rest ​to the government. The reserve is currently maintained at 7.5%.
An expected 3.05 trillion rupee handover, the midpoint of the poll, would be the highest share of expected government revenue in more than two decades, excluding the fiscal year 2019-2020.
But such transfers are unlikely to fully shield the budget from the U.S.-Israeli ​war on Iran, economists said, as higher crude oil prices, a record-low rupee, weaker revenue growth and the prospect of additional spending strain public ​finances.
“This year, the RBI’s profits will go up even more because it has sold off dollars massively … so it is expected that the dividends ‌will (also) go ⁠up,” said Apoorva Javadekar, chief economist at Muthoot Fincorp.
Dollar sales are now benchmarked to the historical average price of FX purchases, which is much lower than the current dollar-rupee rate, allowing for large gains on sales.
Median forecasts from the ​poll pegged the fiscal deficit at ​4.7% of gross domestic product ⁠this fiscal year. Some said it could go as high as 5%, more than last year’s 4.4% and above the government’s 4.3% target.
Piramal Group chief economist Debopam Chaudhuri, who forecast a fiscal deficit ​of 4.6%, said that would amount to more than 18 trillion rupees, higher than the government’s ​estimate of around ⁠17 trillion rupees.
“The government is not here to earn from the RBI,” said Anil Bhansali, head of treasury at Finrex Treasury Advisors. “The government is here to earn from taxes … At present, they have no other alternative … to generate extra revenue.”
Source: reuters

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