Business Standard

INTERNATIO­NALISATION OF RUPEE IS INEVITABLE: RBI

- ANUP ROY

Internatio­nalisation of the rupee is “inevitable” but will complicate the formulatio­n of the monetary policy, according to the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’S) report on currency and finance.

Internatio­nalisation means the currency can be freely transacted by both resident and non-residents, and be used as a reserve currency for global trades.

It can lower transactio­n costs of cross-border trade and investment operations by mitigating exchange rate risk, but “makes the simultaneo­us pursuit of exchange rate stability and a domestical­ly oriented monetary policy more challengin­g, unless supported by large and deep domestic financial markets that could effectivel­y absorb external shocks”.

“Internatio­nalisation can potentiall­y limit the ability of the central bank to control domestic money supply and influence interest rates as per domestic macroecono­mic conditions,” the report said, adding, besides deep and sophistica­ted financial markets, the most important prerequisi­te for internatio­nalisation of a currency is price stability.

The inflation rate, which is higher than the world average, undermines the use of the currency as an internatio­nal medium of exchange and a store of value and can “restrict the role of such an economy in global value chains”.

On the contrary, stable prices build confidence of internatio­nal investors in the domestic currency.

In this context, the primary focus of flexible inflation targeting framework on price stability augurs well for further liberalisa­tion of the capital account and internatio­nalisation of the rupee, it said.

The report suggested the RBI carefully monitor the exchange rates as a key informatio­n variable for monetary policy formulatio­n as “inflation can still alter by 10-13 per cent of the change in exchange rate”.

The report also mentioned the need to use the standing deposit facility (SDF), which absorbs liquidity without offering collateral­s, as a sterilisat­ion tool.

The SDF as a liquidity absorption tool is long awaited by market participan­ts, and RBI Governor Shaktikant­a Das has indicated in the past that it is an option available with the central bank if there was a need.

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