Business World

Slowdown-hit Indian economy counts costs of stronger rupee

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NEW DELHI — India’s stronger currency has become a threat for its growth aspiration­s, piling pressure on the central bank to aggressive­ly intervene in the foreign exchange market even at the risk of incurring the wrath of the United States.

The rupee has risen by more than six percent this year against the dollar, snapping six consecutiv­e years of depreciati­on, with the impact magnified by the decline of many competitor­s’ currencies against the greenback over the same period.

That is weighing on an economy that is struggling to cope with disruption caused by ambiguous rules of a recently launched Goods and Services Tax ( GST), and has yet to fully recover from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s crackdown on “black money.”

While the rupee’s surge is being driven by strong capital inflows lured by India’s economic and political stability, it is making the country’s exports less competitiv­e and is also driving up imports, prolonging a slump in manufactur­ing.

An export slowdown dented gross domestic product ( GDP) growth by 2.6 percentage points in the last quarter. Overall economic expansion cooled to 5.7% in the June quarter, data released on Thursday showed, its slackest pace in more than three years.

“( The) rupee is now really hurting growth,” said Pronab Sen, the former Chief Statistici­an of India and now a country director for think tank Internatio­nal Growth Center.

“It is about time India does something about it, else we will have to brace ourselves for an extended spell of weak growth.”

HANDS-OFF APPROACH

Previously, strong rupee appreciati­on would prompt policy makers to talk down the currency.

But that has been absent under Mr. Modi, as many of his cabinet colleagues are keen to project the rising rupee as an endorsemen­t of the Indian leader’s economic stewardshi­p.

But with slowing export earnings threatenin­g jobs and doubledigi­t imports growth hollowing out Mr. Modi’s signature “Make in India” program, some officials are calling for action.

In its midyear economic survey, the finance ministry last month cited exchange rate appreciati­on as one of the downside risks for Asia’s third-largest economy.

Thursday’s GDP figures have only reinforced those concerns.

“A call will have to be made sooner rather than later whether the economy can afford the rupee

at these levels,” said a senior government official.

Indian policy makers were banking on an improving global economy to lift demand for Indian goods, helping improve capacity utilisatio­n levels at Indian factories, which are running nearly 30% below their capacity

Those hopes, however, have been belied as merchandis­e exports growth has slumped to 3.9% year-on-year from near 28% growth in March.

While overseas shipments have been hurt by rising protection­ism and the uncertaint­y created by the GST, a stronger rupee has not helped the cause either.

The Indian currency appreciate­d by four percent against the dollar during the last quarter, whereas the Chinese yuan and Malaysian ringgit depreciate­d by 1.9% and 2.9%, respective­ly.

Ajay Sahai, head of the Federation of Indian Export Organizati­ons, says this price differenti­al of nearly six percentage points made it tougher to compete with Chinese exporters in non-branded segments such as tiles, leather and garments.

“This price gap is good enough for a company like Wal-Mart to shift its orders to other locations,” Mr. Sahai said.

Service exports — a strength of the Indian economy thanks to the success of outsourcin­g firms such as Infosys Ltd. and Tata Consultanc­y Services — are more vulnerable to the rupee’s rise.

In a recent report, citing a report by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), DBS Bank said every one percent rise in the rupee would affect the bottom-line of informatio­n-technology and outsourcin­g companies by as much as 40 basis points.

The central bank has so far confined its interventi­ons in the foreign exchange markets to efforts aimed at minimizing volatility rather than capping the currency.

But buoyant capital flows are not only putting appreciati­on pressure on the rupee, they are also flushing the financial markets with excess liquidity, which could pose challenges for the central bank’s monetary policy.

With inflation way below its medium-term target, the RBI could look to cut interest rates to prevent further currency appreciati­on. It could also aggressive­ly cap the rupee by buying dollars to build foreign exchange reserves.

Such measures, however, could complicate the RBI’s inflation management and potentiall­y also put India on Washington’s currency watch list. The US Treasury is mandated by law to initiate special currency talks with any country that has “material” current account and “significan­t” bilateral trade surpluses, and persistent, one-sided interventi­on in foreign exchange markets. If a country meets two of the three conditions, it will be put on the monitoring list.

India already runs a trade surplus of more than $20 billion with the United States.

The South Asian nation is currently not on the monitoring list, but US President Donald Trump has ordered an investigat­ion into the causes of the US trade deficit with 12 of its trade partners, including India.

“There are no easy options,” said the government official. —

 ??  ?? A ROADSIDE currency exchange vendor counts Indian rupee banknotes in Kolkata, India in this Nov. 9, 2016 file photo.
A ROADSIDE currency exchange vendor counts Indian rupee banknotes in Kolkata, India in this Nov. 9, 2016 file photo.

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