Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Pros and cons of a falling rupee

ALLTIME LOW Exchange rates are driven by factors that are hardly in control of govts and central banks even in biggest economies

- Roshan Kishore

NEWDELHI:IN the abstract world of economics textbooks, a depreciati­ng currency need not always be a bad thing. Currency depreciati­on can help countries improve their trade balance.

An example can help us understand this. Let us assume Indians imported only iphones and exported only shirts. A fall in the rupee would make our imports more expensive, because Indians would be paying more in rupee terms for the unchanged dollar price of the iphone. This would lead to a reduction in demand for iphones and hence reduce our import bill. Similarly, an American retailer importing shirts from India would be able to get more shirts for the same expenditur­e in dollars. This would make him re-route more of his orders to India and lead to a rise in exports. An increase in net exports means an increase in economic growth.

The preceding discussion raises questions on the validity of alarmist commentary every time the rupee reaches a new low vis-à-vis the dollar.

Are such reactions driven more by warped notions of economic nationalis­m than actual economic interests? Not necessaril­y.the real world is often drasticall­y different from the abstract assumption­s of eco- nomic textbooks. The argument for currency depreciati­on leading to an improvemen­t in trade balance assumes price elasticity of imports and exports. In simple terms, a commodity is described as price elastic if its demand is responsive to a change in price.

One of India’s biggest imports is crude oil. An economy cannot adjust its petroleum consumptio­n with change in prices. Energy requiremen­ts are driven by level of activity and wealth in an economy. Herein lays perhaps the most important cost of a falling rupee for India. A fall in the rupee means a rise in price of India’s crude oil basket (COB). This implies a rise in fiscal deficit and inflation. A rapidly depreciati­ng currency also deprives the economy from exploiting the gains of fall in internatio­nal oil prices. Chart 1 shows the annual change in prices of India’s COB in dollar and rupee terms.

In 12 out of 18 years since 2001-02, the change in the rupee price of India’s COB has been unfavourab­le vis-à-vis the dollar price. This means that when oil prices have fallen, the rupee price has fallen less than the dollar price and when prices have risen, the rupee price has risen more than the dollar price. A bigger fall in the rupee at a time of rising oil prices is bound to increase this pain.

It could be argued that the logic of depreciati­on being beneficial applies to other sectors of the economy. Our non-petroleum trade balance could improve. Non Resident Indians (NRIS) could be sending more money in remittance­s because every dollar gets much more in rupee terms. Unfortunat­ely, the argument does not lend itself to a simple empirical scrutiny.

Chart 2 plots movements in India’s non-petroleum trade balance and current account balance with the rupee-dollar exchange rate. It does not show an improvemen­t in trade/current account performanc­e with a depreciati­ng currency.

To be sure, a multitude of factors apart from exchange rates affect trade and current account balance. This is even truer in today’s age when the multilater­al trading system is in serious jeopardy and world’s two largest economies, the US and China, are heading towards a fullfledge­d trade war.

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