People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVI
No. 30 July 29, 2012 |
Dependence and Fragility C P Chandrasekhar A
FEATURE of Indian development has been the growing
dependence on foreign
finance. But now, as has been happening elsewhere, a part
of the accumulated
foreign capital in the country is threatening to exit and
proving to be a
problem. Symptomatic of the problem is the depreciation of
the rupee. The
currency has lost a fifth or more of its value vis-à-vis
the dollar over the
last year, and the bets are that it would move further
downwards. Needless
to say, underlying that tendency are changes in the
balance of payments that
increase the demand for foreign exchange relative to
supply in SHARP INCREASE IN CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT The
principal factor explaining this decline in reserves is
the sharp increase in
the current account deficit from a negative 45.9 billion
to as much as 78.2
billion dollars. This increase of 22 billion-plus dollars
in the current
account deficit has been only partly matched by the
smaller increase of 16 billion-plus
dollars in inflows on the capital account. In addition,
while in 2010-11 the
dollar was depreciating vis-à-vis many other international
currencies, the
reverse was true in 2011-12. Hence valuation changes
resulted in a nominal (not
real) “accretion” to reserves in 2010-11 as compared with
2.4 billion dollars in
2011-12. The net result is that reserves increased by 25.8
billion dollars in
2010-11, while they declined by 10.4 billion dollars in
2011-12. In
sum, three factors underlie What
is noteworthy is that the element contributing to the
increase in the deficit
is an increase in the import bill from 381 billion to
almost 500 billion
dollars. Exports in 2011-12 actually increased, and so did
net income from
services and net transfers. Thus, a rise in the import
bill seems to be solely
responsible for the deterioration in the current account.
The RBI notes in its
press release of June 29 on developments in India’s
balance of payment: “In 2011-12, the CAD
rose to US 78.2 billion dollars (4.2
per cent of GDP) from US 46.0 billion dollars (2.7 per
cent of GDP) in 2010-11,
largely reflecting higher trade deficit on account of
subdued external demand
and relatively inelastic imports of POL and gold and
silver.” While “subdued
external demand” may be true of the fourth quarter of
2011-12, it is hardly
true of the year as a whole. So what seems to explain the
essential problem on
the external front is the high oil import bill resulting
from the prevailing
high prices of oil in global markets and the high foreign
exchange outlays on
gold, which has become the target of speculative
investment for rich Indians. It
should be expected that matters may have improved since
the end of March
because of the decline in global oil prices in recent
weeks. But unfortunately
for NEED TO FOCUS ON THE IMPORT BILL It
should be clear from the evidence above that when
attempting to address the balance
of payments difficulties and shore up the rupee, the
government should focus on
the import bill, since stimulating exports in the midst of
a global recession
would be difficult. Interestingly, however, the
government’s focus seems to be
on attracting more capital flows. In its policy response,
the government
recently announced a set of measures aimed at increasing
the space for and
improving conditions for foreign financial investors in
the debt market in
India. The ceiling on FII
investment in government securities has been increased
from 15 billion to 20
billion dollars and the residual maturity required for
investments in excess of
10 billion dollars has been reduced from five to three
years. Quicker exit has
been has been allowed even for FII investors in long-term
infrastructure bonds
(with a reduction in the lock-in and residual maturity
requirement from 15
months to one year) and the Infrastructure Development
Fund (with lock-in
reduced from three years to one year and residual maturity
fixed at 15 months).
Finally, the government has now allowed new entities such
as sovereign wealth
funds, multilateral agencies, insurance companies, pension
funds, endowments and
foreign central banks to invest in government debt. Thus,
it is not only the focus on capital inflows that
distinguishes the government’s
response, but the fact that when doing so it seems to be
favouring the debt
market in particular. One reason is of course that rules
and regulations with
regard to FII investments in equity have been liberalised
substantially in the
past. The other possibly is that the slack in debt inflows
is perceived to be
greater, making debt flows more responsive to government
policy shift. The
evidence seems to support that perception. If we consider
2011-12 as a whole
and examine the composition of capital inflows, we find
that though there was a
change in the composition of investment flows away from
portfolio flows to
direct investment flows, the aggregate private investment
flow into equity
remained more or less the same at 39-40 billion dollars in
both 2010-11 and
2011-12. Not much should be made of the shift from
portfolio to direct
investment, since the difference between the two merely
consists of the fact
that direct investors are identified as those who have
cumulatively brought in
capital equal to 10 per cent or more of the equity in the
target firm. Further,
with the stock market weak and volatile, investors may
have preferred to stay
out of the FII route. INCREASED INFLOWS INTO NRI DEPOSITS What
is remarkable about the capital account is that inflows
into NRI deposits had
risen from 3.2 billion dollars in 2010-11 to as much as
11.9 billion dollars in
2011-12. This increase of 8.7 billion dollars in these
inflows exceeds the 6.4
billion dollars increase in aggregate capital flows,
suggesting that they
contributed to neutralising part of the outflow under
other heads. The increase
in NRI deposits is all the more noteworthy because that
increase has largely
been in non-resident external (NRE) rupee accounts, where
remittances from
abroad are converted into and maintained in rupees in the
account. This implies
that the foreign exchange risk is borne by the depositor
and not the bank. On
the other hand, in the case of foreign currency
non-resident (FCNR) accounts,
the deposit is held in dollars and the bank carries the
exchange rate risk. Given
the weakness and volatility of the rupee, one would have
expected that fear of
the depreciation risk would have kept investors away from
NRE accounts. The
reason why they have rushed into such accounts is the
decision of the RBI to
deregulate interest rates on non-resident accounts of
maturity of one year and
above in the second half of the last financial year.
Following the
deregulation, many banks have chose to increase the
interest rates on NRE and
NRO (ordinary non-resident) deposits, with some going in
for extremely large
hikes. The State Bank of India, for example, raised the
interest rates on NRI
fixed deposits of less than Rs one crore with a maturity
of one to two years to
9.25 per cent from 3.82 per cent. The
net result is that despite the nil or extremely low
interest rates on premature
withdrawal, non-residents have rushed into these accounts.
They are clearly
speculating that the depreciation cannot be as much as to
wipe out the high
differential between these rates and international
interest rates. The banks on
the other hand are betting that after taking depreciation
into account they
would be paying a lower interest rate on these accounts
than on comparable
domestic accounts. Matters went so far that the RBI had to
issue a circular cautioning
banks against offering such high interest rates. Reminding
banks that the
interest rates offered on NRE and NRO deposits cannot be
higher than those
offered on comparable domestic rupee deposits, the RBI
also recommended that “banks
should closely monitor their external liability arising
out of such
deregulation and ensure asset-liability compatibility from
systemic risk point
of view.” In
sum, there are two aspects to recent developments on the
external account.
First there has been a significant increase in the
reliance on debt to finance
a persisting current account deficit. As the RBI
recognised in a June 29
release, “India’s external debt, as at end-March 2012, was
placed at US 345.8
billion dollars (20.0 per cent of GDP) recording an
increase of US 39.9 billion
dollars or 13.0 per cent over the end-March 2011 level on
account of significant
increase in commercial borrowings, short-term trade
credits, and rupee
denominated Non-resident Indian deposits.” The second is
that this increase in
debt has associated with it a significant speculative
component, which would
increase the volatility of those flows. This is to add
another element of
vulnerability to the problems created by a high import
bill, especially on
account of gold imports. The government may do well
addressing the latter
vulnerability rather than encouraging further inflows of
speculative debt
capital. However, its recent manoeuvres opening up the
debt market to foreign
investors suggest that it is acting to the contrary. Since
government
securities are tradable, foreign investors could invest in
them to speculate on
expected movements in the rupee’s value. This could
increase external
vulnerability and may explain why the rupee remains weak
despite the
comfortable absolute (even if declining) levels of India’s
foreign reserves.