India’s
external balance of payments appears robust. In the
net there is far more foreign exchange flowing into
the country than flowing out. As a result, the year
2002 ended with foreign exchange reserves crossing
the $70 billion mark This followed the accretion of
as much as $10 billion over the previous four months
and another $10 billion in the six months prior to
that. As has been noted in the financial media, this
trend represents a substantial acceleration of the
rate of growth of reserves, which rose from $20 to
$30 billion over a period of more than four years
ending December 1998 and from there to $40 billion
over a two-year period ending December 2000. A part
of the increase in reserves is the result of a revaluation
of the dollar value of non-dollar foreign currency
holdings, as a result of the depreciation of the dollar
against other currencies, especially the Euro. But
even an overgenerous estimate suggests that over the
period April to September 2002 only about $2.5 billion
of the 9 billion dollar reserve accumulation was the
result of such revaluation. The dollar excess is substantially
due to an excess of inflows over outflows.
Interestingly the recent acceleration in the pace
of reserve accretion occurred despite the fact that
in the past the government had issued Resurgent India
Bonds (in August 1998) and India Millennium Bonds
(November 2000), which together resulted in an inflow
of close to $9 billion in foreign exchange. Despite
the lack of any such concerted effort in recent times
to mobilise foreign exchange through borrowing against
bonds and despite indications that both the government
and the private sector are retiring and reducing their
holding of high cost foreign debt, the RBI has been
forced to mop up foreign exchange inflows to prevent
any undue appreciation of the rupee.
The RBI’s efforts notwithstanding the rupee has indeed
been appreciating, nudging its way “upwards” from
above Rs. 49 to the dollar to below Rs. 48 to the
dollar. This could be seen as reflective of the strength
of the rupee and the growing weakness of the dollar.
But appreciation of the currency in a country that
has not been able to trigger any major export explosion
despite ten years of neoliberal economic reform is
not necessarily a good sign. At given prices, appreciation
of a country’s currency by definition increases the
dollar value of exportables and reduces the local
currency value of its imports. Inasmuch as this triggers
a decrease in aggregate export earnings and increases
the import bill, appreciation can be damaging for
the balance of trade. And since this occurs in India
at a time when oil prices are hardening internationally,
the rupee’s appreciation does threaten to widen the
balance of trade deficit, or the excess of imports
of goods and services over exports of goods and services.
There are two reasons why this has as yet not given
cause for worry to the government and the central
bank. First, the most recent figures on exports point
to some recovery in India’s export performance. Thus
the dollar value of India’s exports rose by 15.7 per
cent during the first eight months of the current
financial year (April-November), which compares well
with the performance during the corresponding period
of the previous year. However, while this may dampen
concerns about the possible damaging effects of exchange
rate appreciation, it cannot be held responsible for
the improvement in India’s reserves position. A sharp
21 per cent increase in the dollar value of oil imports
and a unexpected 12 per cent increase in the dollar
value of non-oil imports have actually increased the
size of the trade deficit recorded during the first
eight months of this financial year ($6247.65 million)
as compared with the corresponding figure for the
previous year ($5814.93 million).
The second reason why the rupee’s appreciation has
not given the government and the central bank cause
for concern is the fact that as a result of a $1.3
billion increase in Private Transfers (largely remittances)
and a $1.5 billion increase in net receipts from Miscellaneous
Factor Services (which includes software and business
services exports), the current account of the balance
of payments recorded a surplus of $1.7 billion during
April-September 2002-03 as compared with a deficit
of $1.5 billion during the corresponding months of
2001-02. That is, the relatively new tendency for
the current account of the balance of payments to
record a surplus noted over the whole financial years
2001-02, has persisted and gathered strength during
the first six months of 2002-03.
But even allowing for this increase in the current
account surplus and after taking account of the possible
effects of dollar depreciation on value of reserves,
there remains around $5 billion dollars of reserve
accretion that remains to be explained even for the
April-November 2002 period. What is more, since the
balance of payments statistics indicate that there
was a net outflow of $2.2 billion under the external
assistance and commercial borrowing heads, we must
account for more than $7 billion of inflows on the
capital account if reserve accumulation during that
period is to be explained. The RBI’s Balance of payments
statistics suggest that about $1.3 billion of this
is on account of foreign investment, another $1.4
billion on account of NRI deposits, around $1 billion
on account of Other Banking Capital, $2.1 billion
on account of Other Capital and $1.4 billion on account
of “errors and omissions”.
Put simply, large “autonomous capital inflows”, occurring
at a time when India’s requirements of capital inflows
to finance any deficit on the current account have
vanished, have played a major role in explaining reserve
accumulation. And inasmuch as the easy availability
of dollars on account of such inflows have resulted
in an appreciation of the rupee’s value in India’s
liberalized exchange markets, exporters who in the
past preferred to delay repatriation of receipts in
order to benefit from any depreciation of the rupee
have been keen on bringing back their dollar receipts
in order not to loose out on the rupee value of receipts
because of the appreciation of the domestic currency.
Such delayed repatriation of exports receipts get
included according the RBI under the “errors and omissions”
head.
Thus when we breakdown dollar receipts by source,
it becomes clear that the robust balance of payments
position as indicated by reserve accumulation and
currency appreciation are largely due to autonomous
flows from abroad. Those autonomous flows result in
a tendency towards currency appreciation, which has
a peculiar effect on export receipts. In the short
run by encouraging the quick repatriation of past
and current export receipts rupee appreciation increases
such receipts. But in the medium and long-term, by
raising the unit dollar value of India’s exports it
affects export revenues adversely.
If any such appreciation-induced worsening of the
balance of trade combines with other factors such
as an increase in oil prices and a rise in imports
on account of buoyancy in the domestic market, a country
can be confronted with a situation of rising reserves
and an appreciating currency precisely at a time when
trade and possibly even current account “fundamentals”
are worsening. The process can be especially damaging
if foreign investment inflows that involve servicing
costs in foreign exchange do not contribute to the
country’s foreign exchange earning. This would be
true of portfolio flows, of acquisition of domestic
companies catering to the domestic market by foreign
firms and of foreign direct investment flows into
joint venture companies catering to the domestic market
where the existing foreign partner seeks to use the
benefits of liberalisation to increase equity share.
These are the principal forms of foreign investment
flows into India. Despite all this, as we have seen
earlier, India is still not in a situation where its
balance of payments has been substantially damaged.
Yet there is a cause for concern for a number of reasons.
Virtually pushed by the embarrassingly large level
of reserves, and unable to keep acquiring dollars
from the market in order to prevent the rupee from
appreciating too fast, the central bank has accelerated
liberalization of rules relating to availability of
foreign exchange for both current account and a growing
set of capital account transactions. Easier access
of foreign exchange for travel, education and the
like, larger access to foreign exchange for companies
wanting to establish or acquire a presence abroad,
slack rules governing use of international credit
cards, increase in the limits to which foreign exchange
can be used by importers without RBI clearance and
changes in rules regarding hedging of foreign exchange
transactions are all signs of a process of creeping
liberalization. The thrust is clearly in the direction
of encouraging use of foreign exchange and liberalizing
rules governing cross border movements of goods and
capital. In fact, discussion on moving towards full
convertibility of the rupee, as recommended by the
Tarapore Committee, which had been shelved after the
East Asian crises, has once again revived.
Unfortunately, liberalisation can aggravate rather
than resolve the problem currently confronting the
government. It is to be expected that when a country
with a relatively liberalised trading environment
experiences currency appreciation, incentives for
investors in that country to produce tradable commodities
that can be exported or are substitutes for imports
deteriorate relative to the incentive to invest in
activities involving the production or provision of
non-tradable goods or services. The desire to borrow
abroad to invest in infrastructural activities producing
non-tradable services, to invest in real estate and
construction and to invest in the stock market increase
substantially. This most often leads to excess capacity
in certain infrastructural areas and even sets off
a speculative investment boom in real estate and stock
markets. Such irrational and speculative investments
have in other contexts been the precursors for a crisis.
The danger is all the more real because the costs
of the inflow of foreign exchange into the country
have to be serviced in time in foreign exchange. Further
while the emerging trends increase dependence on foreign
capital inflows, it also increases the risk that such
flows can dry up and that past inflows are rapidly
repatriated. That is, reserve accumulation and currency
appreciation of the kind that India is experiencing,
the factors that underlie those tendencies and the
government’s liberalising response to the tendencies
are reminiscent of the process by which countries
that were relatively healthy in East Asia and Latin
America were pushed into crisis. This curious similarity
makes India’s remarkable dollar reserve even more
noteworthy than it is being made out to be. It could
be the first sign of a crisis that India has managed
to stave off thus far.