Business Today

KNEE-JERK REACTION

- - Dipak Mondal

THE GOVERNMENT has made a slew of announceme­nts -- including removal of limits on foreign portfolio investor (FPI) exposure to corporate bonds and curbs on import of non-essentials goods -- to check depreciati­on of rupee and ballooning current account deficit (CAD).

Will this knee-jerk reaction help in the short term? The jury, it seems, is out. Economists say India’s CAD problem is structural. They say most nonpetrole­um imports are now consumptio­ndriven and any curb can only impact consumptio­n and increase inflation. Besides, the protection­ist measures will not go down well with investors and rating agencies. The only hope is oil prices taking a breather.

The other measures to check the rupee fall -- which include incentivis­ing issuance of rupee-denominate­d masala bonds and FPI investment­s in corporate bonds -- may also not make much headway as foreign investors will anyway stay away from emerging economies facing currency depreciati­on and CAD challenges. In fact, some are of the view that the government should let the rupee fall, which may on its own disincenti­vise imports and prop up exports.

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