Business Standard

India, Japan sign $75-billion currency-swap agreement

- INDIVJAL DHASMANA

In another move by the Modi regime to shore up the rupee and address current account deficit (CAD) woes, India and Japan on Monday inked an agreement to raise their emergency provision to increase the forex flow up to $75 billion from the current $50 billion.

Technicall­y called the bilateral currency-swap agreement, this facility will not only enable India to borrow up to $75 billion on tap when the need arises, it will also help in bringing down the cost of capital for Indian entities while accessing the overseas market.

However, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is yet to address the hedging requiremen­t for investment in infrastruc­ture.

The swap arrangemen­t, signed during the visit of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Japan, should aid in bringing greater stability to foreign exchange and capital markets in India, according to an official statement here.

Modi held delegation-level talks with his Japanese counterpar­t, Shinzo Abe, and discussed bilateral, regional and global issues including the situation in the Indo-Pacific region.

Currency swap is an agreement between two countries to trade in their own local currencies, where both pay for import and export at predetermi­ned rates of exchange without bringing in a thirdcount­ry currency.

“With a view to enhancing financial and economic cooperatio­n, the government­s of Japan and India welcomed the agreement to conclude a Bilateral Swap Arrangemen­t of $75 billion,” said the IndiaJapan Vision Statement, issued after the meeting between the two leaders.

Economic Affairs Secretary Subhash Garg said this was one of the largest swap agreements in the world.

India signed a currency-swap deal with Japan for the first time in 2008, but it was limited to $3 billion. Both the countries reviewed it first in 2011 and then in 2013, and increased the size to $15 billion and $50 billion, respective­ly.

The policy interest rate in the US has seen a gradual increase in the recent months. This is one of the causes of the dollar strengthen­ing against other currencies of the world. Dollar strengthen­ing is also resulting in a flight of capital from emerging markets. In recent months, government­s and central banks around the world, especially those of emerging economies, have been taking policy measures to address dollar appreciati­on and improve the availabili­ty of foreign capital. The decision to enter into the currency-swap agreement is another important measure to improve confidence in the Indian market.

To address issues of outward flows of foreign capital, India has taken steps towards containing the CAD and rupee volatility. These include relaxation­s in the policy for external borrowing and issuing offshore rupee bonds (masala bonds), reviewing restrictio­ns on foreign portfolio investment in debt, hike in customs duty on curtailing imports of non-essential items, promoting exports, and financing standing working capital of oil-marketing companies by long-term external borrowings.

The trade deficit, the biggest part of the CAD, declined to $13.98 billion in September.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi with his Japanese counterpar­t Shinzo Abe during the joint press statement in Tokyo on Monday
PHOTO: PTI Prime Minister Narendra Modi with his Japanese counterpar­t Shinzo Abe during the joint press statement in Tokyo on Monday

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