Chintaman Dwarakanath Deshmukh was the first Indian Governor of the Reserve Bank
of India. He later became the Union Finance Minister. In recognition of his meritorious
services to the Reserve Bank and the nation and in order to perpetuate his memory,
the Reserve Bank of India has instituted in 1984 an annual lecture series entitled
'Chintaman Deshmukh Memorial Lectures'.
Chintaman Deshmukh was born on January 14, 1896 at Nata, near Fort Raigarh, in Maharashtra,
in a land-holding family with a tradition of public service. Chintaman's father,
Dwarakanath Ganesh Deshmukh, was a respected lawyer and his mother, Bhagirathibai
was a deeply religious lady.
Chintaman Deshmukh had an outstanding educational career. He stood first in the
Matriculation examination of the University of Bombay in 1912, and also secured
the first Jagannath Sankersett Scholarship in Sanskrit. At the University of Cambridge
in 1917, he graduated in the field of Natural Sciences Tripos with Botany, Chemistry
and Geology, winning the Frank Smart Prize in Botany. He appeared for the Indian
Civil Service Examination, then held only in London, in 1918, and topped the list
of successful candidates.
For most of his 21 years with the Indian Civil Service, Chintaman Deshmukh was with
the then Central Provinces and Berar Government where, among other things, he was
probably the youngest among those who held the positions of Revenue Secretary and
Finance Secretary. While on leave in London, he worked as one of the secretaries
to the Second Round Table Conference in which Mahatma Gandhi participated. The memorandum
submitted by the Central Provinces and Berar Government, which Deshmukh prepared,
for the purpose of the enquiry by Sir Otto Niemeyer leading to the award on the
financial relations between the Centre and the Provinces under the Government of
India Act, 1935, won him high acclaim.
Chintaman Deshmukh's association with the Reserve Bank of India began in July 1939,
when he was appointed Liaison Officer in the Bank to keep the Government of India
in touch with the Bank's affairs. Three months later, he was appointed Secretary
of the Central Board of the Bank and two years later in December 1941, as the Deputy
Governor. He was Governor from August 11, 1943 to June 30, 1949.
Chintaman Deshmukh proved to be an outstanding Governor. He presided over the transformation
of the Reserve Bank from a private shareholders' bank to a nationalised institution
and secured the enactment of a comprehensive legislation for the regulation of banking
companies and the establishment of the first financial institution for the provision
of long-term credit to industry, namely, the Industrial Finance Corporation of India
(IFCI). He also initiated a number of steps for building up an adequate machinery
for rural credit. Commenting on Chintaman Deshmukh's role in regard to the provision
of rural credit, a leading co-operator wrote that he "brought about a complete change
in the approach from one of hesitant conservatism or laissez-fare to that of a progressive
outlook and adoption of positive steps to built up an institutional machinery to
provide agricultural credit and for channelling Reserve Bank funds for development
of agriculture".
Chintaman Deshmukh played an important role in the Bretton Woods Conference in July
1944, which lead to the establishment of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD). In both of these institutions,
Chintaman Deshmukh was a Member of the Board of Governors for ten years and was
the Chairman at the Joint Annual Meeting of these two institutions held in Paris
in 1950.
In September 1949, the then Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru appointed Chintaman
Deshmukh as India's Special Financial Ambassador to America and Europe, in which
capacity he conducted the preliminary negotiations for a wheat loan from the USA.
Towards the end of the year, Jawaharlal Nehru asked Chintaman Deshmukh to work on
the organisation of the Planning Commission and appointed him member of it when
it was set up on April 1, 1950. Shortly thereafter, Chintaman Deshmukh joined the
Union Cabinet as the Finance Minister and held that office with distinction till
he resigned in July 1956. His stewardship of the country's finances was marked by
prudence as well as a humane perspective and vision in dealing imaginatively with
the changing financial needs of a developing country. Financial policy was directed
towards facilitating the achievement of rapid growth, social justice and economic
stability. He made significant contributions to the formulation and implementation
of the country's First and Second Five Year Plans. He was also primarily responsible
for such important landmarks in the area of social control of the financial structure
such as the enactment of a new Companies Act, and nationalisation of the Imperial
Bank of India and life insurance companies.
A different phase of public service by Chintaman Deshmukh in the realms of education
and social service was noticed since his Chairmanship of the University Grants Commission
from 1956 to 1960, helping to lay a solid foundation for the improvement of the
standards of University education in the country. He was Vice-Chancellor the University
of Delhi from March 1962 to February 1967, building it up as an outstanding institution
for higher learning.
Chintaman Deshmukh also gave generously of his time and energies to the building
up of other important institutions devoted to the cause of education and research.
He was President of the Indian Statistical Institute (ISI) from 1945 to 1964. It
was during the period when he was both the President of the ISI and the Union Finance
Minister that the National Sample Survey, to be conducted by the ISI, was instituted
(1951-52), and the Central Statistics Office was established. He was President of
the Institute of Economic Growth, New Delhi, from 1965 to 1974. He served as the
Honorary Chairman of the National Book Trust from 1957 to 1960. He founded the India
International Centre in 1959, for which he was the Life President. He headed the
Board of Governors of the Administrative Staff College of India, Hyderabad, from
1959 to 1973 and was also the Chairman of the Indian Institute of Public Administration,
New Delhi, in 1963-64. Other bodies with which Chintaman Deshmukh was associated
included the Indian Council of World Affairs (1960-67) and the United Nations Institute
for Training and Research (1965-70). Alongwith his wife Durgabai, Chintaman Deshmukh
participated in multifaceted social service work, especially in the functional literacy
and family planning work undertaken by the Andhra Mahila Sabha, Madras and Hyderabad,
a social organisation of which Smt. Durgabai was the Founder President. He became
its President after Smt. Durgabai's death.
Chintaman Deshmukh's old college at Cambridge, Jesus College, elected him an Honorary
Fellow in 1952 in recognition of his distinguished contribution in the areas of
Indian and international finance and administration. He was co-recipient of the
Ramon Magsaysay Foundation's Award for distinguished Government Service in 1959.
A number of prestigious universities and institutions, international as well as
Indian, conferred on him doctorates honoris causa; these included the Universities
of Princeton (USA), Leicester (UK), Pune, Delhi, Allahabad, Nagpur and Osmania (India),
as also the Indian Statistical Institute.
Chintaman Deshmukh had a great love for gardening and horticulture was his special
hobby. His love for Sanskrit is well known and he published a volume of his poems
in Sanskrit in 1969. He was also proficient in a number of foreign languages.
Chintaman Deshmukh died in his 87th year at Hyderabad on October 2, 1982. With his
rare combination of qualities of idealism and objectivity, culture and science,
integrity, dedication and imagination, Chintaman Deshmukh always ranks high among
the eminent sons of India.
Shri C.D. Deshmukh Memorial Lectures delivered so far:
Sr.No. |
Lecture Series No.
|
Delivered by
|
Subject
|
Date
|
1. |
18. |
Arvind Panagariya |
India at 125: Reclaiming the Lost Glory and Returning the Global Economy to the Old Normal |
December 15, 2023 |
2. |
17. |
Mr. Agustín Carstens |
Central Banking and Innovation: Partners in the Quest for Financial Inclusion |
April 25, 2019 |
3. |
16. |
Willem H. Buiter |
The Good and the Bad Fiscal Theory of the Price Level |
April 11, 2017 |
4. |
15. |
Joseph E. Stiglitz |
A Revolution in Monetary
Policy : Lessons in the Wake of the Global Financial Crisis |
January 3, 2013 |
5. |
14. |
Lord Adair Turner |
After the Crises: Assessing
the Costs and Benefits of Financial Liberalisation |
February 15, 2010 |
6. |
13. |
T. T. Mboweni |
Fasten Your Seatbelts
! Monetary Policy Challenges In Turbulent Times |
November 2, 2007 |
7. |
12. |
Jagdish Bhagwati |
In Defense of Globalization: It Has a Human Face but We Can Do Better |
December 12, 2002 |
8. |
11. |
Charles A. E. Goodhart |
Whither Central
Banking? |
December 7, 2000 |
9. |
10. |
Howard Davies |
International
Financial Regulation: The Quiet Revolution |
February 7, 2000 |
10. |
9. |
Edward A. J. George |
Economic Policy Approaches - Some Reflections |
October 14, 1996 |
11. |
8. |
John Crow |
Central Banks, Monetary Policy and the Financial System |
November 22, 1993 |
12. |
7. |
Jacques de Larosiere |
The Worldwide Adjustment Process in the Eighties |
March 24, 1992 |
13. |
6. |
Gerald Corrigan |
Global Economic Prospects at the Turn of the Decade |
January 11, 1990 |
14. |
5. |
Michael Camdessus |
The Evolving International Monetary System: Some Issues |
October 4, 1988 |
15. |
4. |
Lawrence Klein |
Financial Innovation: Effects on Economic Performance |
November 24, 1987 |
16. |
3. |
Janos Kornai |
State-Owned Firm, Bureaucracy and Market: Hungarian Experience |
February 7, 1986 |
17. |
2. |
James Tobin |
Central Banks and Government Budget |
January 9, 1985 |
18. |
1. |
Nicholas Kaldor |
The Failure of Monetarism |
January 18, 1984 |
|