As
the UPA government is celebrating its 9th year in power, Rupee has greeted
them—the Prime Minister and his colleagues and the real power wielder in the
present outfit, Sonia Gandhi—dancing down the hill merrily.
As
the oil companies continued to swarm the currency markets with their demand for
dollars, rupee was pushed down to a new low of 55.39 per dollar on 22 May
2012. Indeed at one point of trading,
rupee touched an all-time low of 55.47 per dollar. The immediate fallout of the
depreciating rupee is: Sensex lost by 1% to close at 16,026, while global
markets rallied under the hope that Eurozone will soon shift to growth.
As
the fall of rupee continued, the RBI watched from the sidelines without
intervening in the Forex trading, if market reports are to be believed. And that appears to be the right course, for
there is nothing much that it could really do either.
Indeed,
very recently, the RBI directed the Indian exporters to transfer half of their
export earnings into rupee against the extant rule under which exporters are
permitted to keep 100% of their export earnings in foreign currency. This
measure is expected to bring in foreign currency of about $2.5 billion, which
according to market analysts would suffice to fund the gap in the short term.
Further, it has also imposed a cap on banks’ positions in the exchanges for
trading currency futures and options at $100 million or 15% of the outstanding
open interest, whichever is lower, and also directed them to bring down the
positions within the limit by June 30.
This
may not really serve the purpose for long, for it is feared that the current
deficit, which is currently at 4% of GDP, may rise further as the growth rate
that has already fallen from 9% to below 7% by 2011-12, is all set to slide—as
predicted by the market pundits—further. Yet, ours is considered to be the
second fastest growing economy in the world. Ironically, it is this growth rate
coupled with high inflation is what is fuelling the rise in imports. Which is
why the current account deficit will continue to further widen, making the job
of the RBI tougher. This increased need for foreign capital to fund its rising
current account deficit will be further aggravated by the ongoing fall in
foreign investment inflows as also the exiting of capital market by the FIIs
under the fear of high risk usually ascribed to emerging markets.
But
the visibly upset Finance Minister says that the Eurozone debt crisis is to be
blamed for the falling rupee, as it has impacted the Indian economy through
deceleration in demand for exports from India and fall in the capital flows.
But a dispassionate look at the whole episode tells a different story: domestic
factors such as large and rising current account deficit, bloated fiscal
deficit, which is incidentally worst among the BRICS countries, persistent high
inflation rate, that too, mostly driven by supply-side constraints, which
incidentally is dubbed as the highest amongst emerging economies, and reticence
of the government in launching new reforms, have cumulatively made India a less
favorite destination for foreign investors.
Market
whisperings suggest that the RBI might launch a few more measures to checkmate
the fall of rupee by augmenting dollar inflows into the country. One of such
activities could be encouraging the NRIs to remit funds by inviting investments
in specially floated bonds denominated in dollar currency, that too, at higher
interest rate vis-à-vis the prevailing US rates. It may, to a certain extent,
help in tiding over the fall of rupee further, but it will certainly become a
terrific burden for the government at a later date, i.e., when servicing it, as
it had indeed happened a couple of years back.
Looking
back, some analysts opine that the RBI should have intervened in the currency
market during end 2009 to 2011 when rupee had appreciated from 54 to 44 per
dollar. Instead it kept quiet then, perhaps at the pressure of importers who
obviously wanted rupee to be stronger in order to keep their import costs low.
They further say that keeping away from market when the rupee is appreciating
and intervening when it is sliding, that too, more because of weak
fundamentals, is not a right exchange rate management policy for the RBI to
adopt.
Some
analysts even argue that in a way, the depreciating rupee might do good for the
country, for it is certain to improve the export performance, while
discouraging the imports whereby the current account deficit might shrink in
the course of time. Secondly, looking at
the inflation differential of about 4% between the US and other important
trading partner countries, it appears that letting the rupee find its real
value—say around 65 over the next 6-7 months—is economically sensible.
That
said, the government cannot ignore the need for improving the investment
climate in the country, besides improving the macro fundamentals by reining in
fiscal deficit. It should therefore: come out of its stasis and align the oil
prices with global prices at the earliest so as to not only reduce the mounting
subsidies but also moderate the import of crude oil; professionally work
towards de-bottlenecking the infrastructural constraints, particularly in
sectors like power, telecom, oil and gas, fertilizers, airlines and textiles;
and finally introduce a couple of reforms that would do well in uplifting the
investment climate. In the meanwhile,
let the RBI focus on moderating the volatility in the market.
As
the government and the RBI are engaged in correcting the weaknesses in the
system and improve the macroeconomic fundamentals, rupee shall find its own
value. And that alone ensures sustainability.
-
GRK
Murty
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