The Reserve
Bank of India, which oversees the rupee-dollar exchange rate,
is allowing the rupee to appreciate. It has the approval of the
government because in a Cabinet note on prices, the finance ministry
has said a combination of rupee appreciation along with tightening
monetary policies would be the best solution for tackling inflation.
The rupee has been strengthening against the dollar over the
last couple of months. It touched a nine-year high of 41.57/58
against the dollar a few days back. Although this seems to be
a short-term view of the government, speculation is now rife that
the rupee might be allowed to breach the 40 per dollar mark or
even higher.
An appreciation of the currency helps increase the supply of
goods and services domestically by making imports cheaper and
exports expensive. This, in turn, helps to control inflation.
A rising rupee has a dampening effect on exports since they become
more expensive in dollar terms while imports become cheaper.
However, the negative impact on exports is immediate. India's
Federation of Indian Export Organisations (FIEO) says the appreciation
of the rupee has severely eroded the profitability of exporters.
For IT exporters the rising rupee could mean a fall in operating
margins and increased costs as they will receive less rupees for
each dollar earned. According to Ambit Capital, each percentage
rise in the rupee shaves off 30 to 40 basis points from an IT
company's margins.
Those in textile business face stiff competition from our two
neighbours Bangladesh and China. Bangladesh's exports to the US
increased by six per cent while ours declined by 12 per cent,
despite a much larger production capacity. Chinese exports rose
by an even higher 23 per cent. With the rise in rupee India's
textile will become more expensive than those manufactured by
our counterparts. The Southern India Mills Association (SIMA)
appealed to the Centre to immediately control the rupee appreciation
against the US dollar to sustain the export growth of the Indian
textile and clothing industry and have a level-playing field in
the global market.
BPOs could be the worst hit as the margins earned by the foreign
companies from outsourcing jobs to India are coming under pressure.
The ITeS sector is less likely post higher growth rates as it
has done in the past.
Even the India Inc. is divided whether the Reserve Bank should
take steps to protect exporters from the appreciating rupee that
will adversely affect their profits. While leading business chamber
CII says the domestic industry would have to accept a strengthening
rupee in the short term, FICCI, Assocham and exporters' body FIEO
want RBI to intervene and check the sharp rise in the currency.
The argument of controlling inflation through a stronger exchange
rate works in theory which states that imports increase the supply
of goods, and cheaper imported goods help control the cost of
the typical consumption basket. This works fine in a country like
the US, where everything from coffee to footwear and clothing
is imported. But look closely at India's import basket. The largest
components comprising our import baskets are crude oil and electrical
and non-electrical machinery, that is, capital goods. The latter
does not have much impact on inflation but the former does. But
these are de facto administered prices. Besides petrol prices
can be tweaked without reference to the exchange rate, simply
by reducing duties, or asking oil companies to hold prices and
reimbursing them from the tax kitty. This fiscal response is independent
of rupee-dollar relation.
The rise of the rupee against the dollar is without precedent,
and seems to have been determined by volatile flows, not by macro-fundamentals.
In the absence of hedging instruments like currency futures it
seems pernicious to let the rupee rise abruptly, all in the name
of inflation control. India has close to 12 million small and
medium enterprises. They contribute around 6.7 per cent to the
GDP and employ 30 million people, second to agriculture. They
comprise 35 per cent of the total exports.
It is important to remember that in India exports create employment.
One can expect that all those sectors that have been adversely
affected due to this appreciation of rupee will withhold their
expansion plans and capital investment. This would translate into
less employment opportunities, badly impacting job seekers. So,
at the end of the day the government might be able to tame inflation
but will have unemployment and diminishing growth rate as its
policy by-products. All these are bad signals for our economy,
which is one of the fastest growing nations in the world now.
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