As per the framework on countercyclical capital buffer (CCyB) laid out in the RBI (Commercial Banks – Prudential Norms on Capital Adequacy) Directions, 2025, CCyB would be activated as and when circumstances warranted, and the decision would normally be pre-announced.
Also read: RBI tightens scrutiny of overseas investments as outflows surge to $27 billion in FY26
The framework envisages the credit-to-GDP gap as the main indicator, which may be used in conjunction with other supplementary indicators.
“Based on review and empirical analysis of CCyB indicators, it has been decided that it is not necessary to activate CCyB at this point in time,” RBI said in a statement.
As per the apex bank, the aim of the CCCB regime is twofold.
Firstly, it requires a bank to build up a buffer of capital in good times, which may be used to maintain the flow of credit to the real sector in difficult times.Secondly, it achieves the broader macro-prudential goal of restricting the banking sector from indiscriminate lending in the periods of excess credit growth that have often been associated with the building up of system-wide risk.
In the backdrop of the 2008 global financial crisis, the Group of Central Bank Governors and Heads of Supervision (GHOS), the overseeing body of the standards set by the Basel Committee, envisaged the introduction of a framework on countercyclical capital measures.
