Will The NDA Double The Buying Power Of The
Rupee?
A country’s economy gets reflected through
its currency- Nirmala Sitharaman
Yes, that’s right, gradual revaluation is on the cards now,
not just as economic circumstance, but as policy. The main reason for this may
be the enhanced realisation that growth in the Indian economy is led 80% or
more by domestic factors, including supportive imports, and less than 20% by
exports.
Not only that, in the present world, even masters of mass
and low technology export-led growth, such as China, do not have it easy.
The exception is high technology, almost exclusively from
the R&D rich developed world, to the underdeveloped world.
This is somewhat inelastic and perennial, notwithstanding
competition, and can often charge whatever it likes, and not have to worry
about exchange rates either.
Prime Minister
Narendra Modi, on the campaign trail in 2013-14, did make it clear that he
would work to strengthen the currency. And now, it is beginning to happen, to
the delight of international investors like Jim Rogers, who not only like
strong currencies, but didn’t think a “talkative” Modi had it in him.
Recent economic circumstance has helped, such as an
inflow of $8.85 billion foreign institutional investment (FII), in March 2017
alone.
This illustrative amount has flowed into Indian equity
and debt, following on from a positive sentiment occasioned by the recent
thumping election successes. The last time this happened in a given month was
in boom-time 2002.
India runs a tight fiscal deficit at 3.5% heading towards
2.5% of an enhanced GDP, and this is much admired.
It has benefited from low inflation, lowered oil
importation costs, and the fastest growth rate in the world for any major
economy, projected at 7.2% this year, and nearly 8% next year.
The overt change in the Government’s policy towards
strengthening the rupee seeks to also reorient the focus of the exporting
community.
Indian exporters, for long, have been passively dependent
on Government intervention to keep the
exchange rate favourable and themselves competitive in dollar terms.
Accordingly, the
Government has routinely bought US dollars, stacking them in our foreign
exchange reserves, and sold Indian rupees through the Reserve Bank of India
(RBI), deliberately keeping the national currency weak.
Commerce Minister Nirmala Sitharaman and several others
in the BJP taking their cue from Prime Minister Modi and Finance Minister
Jaitley, have now suggested that export competitiveness should be looked at
differently.Henceforth, it should be enhanced via improved policy decisions
such as GST, digitisation, better company affairs management/transparency, and
other initiatives in the pipeline.
The operational thrust should be on improving efficiency
via automation, superior logistics, better infrastructure, removal of physical
and bureaucratic bottlenecks, more value-addition, development of a cold chain
etc..
Let us remember that our software exports are being hit,
partially due to reduced demand because of automation and greater use of
“cloud”, but also because of a tendency to body-shop and sell labour rather
than invention and innovation.
Of course, a lot of the learned commentary may well concentrate
on narrow focus statistics in the short term. This to claim whole swathes of
Indian business and industry, from components to textiles, will be badly done
by because of a strong rupee.
It is true, after all, that allowing and abetting the
strengthening of the rupee, flies in the face of the conventional policy
position in place for a number of years.
But it was, in hindsight, a position that ran contrary to
the overall interests of the country, even if, like demonetisation, it involves
some short term discomfort.
The rupee reached a high of 64.41 on the 13th
of April, the figure representing a 5% appreciation already against the US
dollar in less than four months of this year.
Assuming that the US Federal Reserve does not reduce interest
rates, nor raise them more than three times a year, and at the present pace,
the rupee should indeed, based on domestic factors, continue to strengthen
against the dollar.
Extrapolating the speed of current emerging trends, the
prescient thinking is that we might be moving eventually towards Rs. 30 to the
US dollar, at less than half of the exchange rate today.
This, not overnight, but certainly during the course of
the “Modi era”, meaning the next 7-12 years.
Or could it happen quite soon, based on the present pace
of things? Why not? Oil prices halved in six months via a demand supply
mismatch, and fell further still before stabilising.
Rs. 30 is something of a time machine valuation target: it
was last seen around 1994, 23 years ago, but could well come upon us again
fairly quickly.
Should this happen, in reflection of a constant stream of
bold structural reforms/modernisations
and their implementation, it has the potential to simultaneously transform the
entire economic narrative of this nation root and branch.
Some well-worn things will become redundant, such as stashing
black money secretly in convertible currencies abroad.
There would simply be no need when the rupee is stable,
strong, and appreciating constantly. At double the present value, almost al
fear of a flight of capital, will also be automatically banished.
It has been suggested that the previous political regime,
renowned for its corruption, may have also kept the rupee deliberately weak
precisely to assist the valuation of their secret hard currency hoards abroad.
Also, that, in cahoots with foreign predators, they may
have, for the price of suitable kickbacks, made it possible for the foreigners’
dollars to buy/sell much deeper into Indian stocks, debt, business/industry/defence.
The exact reverse may be true now. With a strong domestic
economy and political stability, volatility caused by global trends, even the
extreme condition of war, may not be very arduous.
This could set the stage for the rupee to go fully-convertible,
as behoves an aspirant to the UNSC. In fact, other countries who trade or
manufacture in India, may well want to hold some of their reserves in the
convertible Indian rupee. After all, India is set on a strong growth path for
at least the next three decades.
The story so far however has been the exact reverse. We
have seen two formal devaluations since independence, once in 1966, when the
rupee stopped being pegged at Rs 13 to the British pound (since 1926), and was repegged
at an official rate of Rs. 7.5 to the US dollar instead.
This, inevitably, following on from major balance of
payment crises, high inflation, and almost non-existent foreign exchange
reserves.
This rate slid gradually, and was at Rs. 17 to the US
dollar in 1990, though unofficial rates ran at 20-30% higher.
But as another major financial crisis hit India in 1991,
the official rupee caught up after it had to be devalued substantially. That
year also saw the most extensive economic liberalisation in independent India’s
history.
Through the first decade of the millennium the exchange
rate inched towards Rs. 50 to the US dollar and higher still thereafter.
A stronger rupee
now will lower our oil and import bills dramatically.
Consumption spending on
foreign goods will grow. As will the acquisition costs of companies and
properties abroad. Indians taking foreign holidays will also benefit.
Our purchase power parity (PPP) rankings will improve
substantially. So will our lending, borrowing and sovereign ratings, and those
of our leading enterprises.
This will set up a virtuous cycle of foreign investment.
It will grow our stock markets beyond recognition.
The GDP, slated to double from over $2 trillion, in the
next five years, will quadruple instead.
The per capita incomes will improve substantially, given
lower birth rates. Our national virtues of a vibrant democracy, a free and fair
judiciary, media oversight, the rule of law, a large labour force and skilled
professionals, will all further strengthen our international appeal.
Bottom line: a strong economy makes for a strong
currency. It is not a double-edged sword at all once the benefits start rolling
in, and should be welcomed with open arms.
For: The Sunday Guardian
(1,318 words)
April 19th, 2017
Gautam Mukherjee
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