RBI
GOVERNOR RAGHURAM RAJAN RECEIVES DEUTSCHE BANK PRIZE
Reserve
Bank of India governor Raghuram G Rajan has been awarded the Fifth Deutsche
Bank Prize for Financial Economics 2013, in recognition of his ground-breaking
research work which influenced financial and macro-economic policies around the
world.
The
academic prize is sponsored by the Deutsche Bank Donation Fund and carries an
endowment of euro 50,000. The Centre for Financial Studies (CFS) awards the
prize bi-annually in partnership with Goethe University Frankfurt.
Presenting the prize to Rajan, Deutsche Bank co-chairman Juergen Fitschen on
Thursday said that it would have been hard to find a more deserving winner for
this year's award.
Rajan's
career "is not only marked by path-breaking, empirically-based research,
but he never shied away from the real world of complex policy issues and
special interests. He never shied away from speaking inconvenient truths,"
Fitschen said.
He noted that Rajan had in 2005 warned about the dangers of building up
"unsustainable imbalances in the financial system," three years ahead
of global financial crisis.
"Prof. Rajan's work revealed that the relationship between the financial
sector and the rest of the economy is so complex that it is not good enough to
simply look at the size of the financial sector in relation to the gross
domestic product (GDP), as is done so often at present," Fitschen said.
He had also "warned us about the dangers of using or rather misusing"
financial regulations and financial systems for purposes other than their
original objectives, for example, for safeguarding stability or fostering
growth, the Deutsche Bank co-CEO said.
The
housing bubble in the United States, which triggered the financial crisis in
2008, had highlighted the danger of using the financial system to make up for
the failures in social policies.
Jury chairman and director of the Centre for Financial Studies Michael
Heliassos said the organisers are quite pleased to welcome Rajan in his new
capacity as the RBI governor.
Rajan was picked up for the prize from more than 260 nominations from top
universities, central banks and research centres in 37 countries. More than
half of the nominations came from the US.
No comments:
Post a Comment