Gulf News

RBI does the right thing by not intervenin­g

- Ila Patnaik

The Indian rupee has been sliding against the US dollar in recent days as emerging markets come under pressure. That’s made the currency one of Asia’s worst performers, losing 12 per cent this year.

The rupee’s latest moves have sparked a debate in India. The Reserve Bank of India’s stated policy is to reduce volatility, rather than target a specific level for the currency. Should the RBI intervene to strengthen the rupee?

If so, what precisely should it do and what would the impact be? A number of factors are pressuring officials to act — not least among them, that the rupee has become both a badge of national pride and a tool of political brinkmansh­ip. But so far the government and the RBI have been unruffled by the fear-mongering. They shouldn’t lose their nerve.

Some of the loudest complaints have come from companies fretting about the likely impact currency depreciati­on will have on corporate balance-sheets. Those who bet the RBI would step in when faced with depreciati­on pressure borrowed heavily in internatio­nal markets.

Yet India’s currency-derivative markets, with many restrictio­ns and limited liquidity, make hedging quite expensive, so these companies are now exposed.

Another pressure point is the price of oil, which quickly becomes a matter of unhappines­s among the middle-class. India imports about 80 per cent of its petroleum needs, a factor only complicate­d by the country’s exorbitant domestic taxes on fuel - almost 100 per cent on gasoline and 60-70 per cent on diesel.

This means that when the rupee depreciate­s, the exchange-rate pass through to fuel prices and, as a result, the rest of the economy, is high.

Selling dollars

The RBI does have a number of instrument­s it can use to support the currency. The most obvious is to intervene in foreign exchange markets by selling dollars: The central bank has more than $400 billion (Dh1.47 trillion) in reserves at its disposal. Alternativ­ely, it could raise interest rates, a move justified by the currency weakness, higher oil prices and the latest abovetarge­t inflation data.

Third, it could raise dollars by borrowing from nonresiden­t Indians, which has become a go-to in times of currency stress. The RBI has used these instrument­s in the past — and the results haven’t been pretty.

The central bank moved to prevent rupee depreciati­on in May 2013, after then Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s taper talk. Interventi­on continued through September, as pressure continued to mount on emerging market currencies.

The result? The rupee fared worse than all other emerging market currencies. Every move — from tightening liquidity and raising interest rates to discussion of non-resident borrowing and restrictio­ns on derivative­s — was interprete­d as a panic reaction that only confirmed the rupee was under pressure. Foreigners felt it was better to take money out of India sooner rather than later, and the fall of the rupee became a self-fulfilling prophecy. Currency and derivative­s markets, money and credit markets, and high costs of borrowing all hurt the economy in subsequent months.

In the years that followed, the RBI continued to manage the rupee carefully. It mostly achieved this by reducing the size of the rupee-dollar derivative­s market, which made its interventi­on more effective, and then buying rupees forward. To some extent, the approach worked: Currency volatility settled. While the real exchange rate of the rupee appreciate­d, the currency didn’t weaken in line with India’s higher inflation.

Overdue recalibrat­ion

Yet some could argue this merely set the stage for the current rout, which can be seen more as an overdue recalibrat­ion than a flash in the pan.

To be sure, there are some segments of the economy that gain from rupee depreciati­on. A weaker currency helps export growth, which has been weak in recent years. Companies — many of which are small and labour-intensive — have struggled with the transition to a goods and services tax, and several have had a hard time getting credit. A weaker rupee would also offset competitio­n of cheap imports from countries like China, which could give domestic industries a much-needed boost.

The RBI and India’s government, at present, are calm. This is a strong posture that must withstand the daily news, media pressure, lobbying and political taunting. In 2016, the RBI had been given a new mandate to meet its inflation target and maintain growth. Defending the currency at all costs isn’t part of the brief. This latest weakness will test its resolve.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates