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India Turns Back the Clock on Reforms

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For the past few weeks, Indian finance minister P. Chidambaram has been promising a fresh set of reforms to kick-start the country’s ailing economy. Some minor changes were implemented which excited nobody. Then, on August 14, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) turned back the clock. “India goes back two decades as RBI imposes capital curbs to stabilize rupee,” read a headline in the business daily The Economic Times.

The Indian rupee has been falling for several months now. On January 31, 2013, it was 53.19 to the U.S. dollar. On August 14, it closed at 61.30 — a record low.

The latest moves by the RBI impose exchange controls. Investment by Indian companies in foreign assets has been cut from 400% of net worth to 100% of net worth. Many Indian companies and business houses were looking at mergers and acquisitions abroad. They will now have to rework their plans. The government says that it is only investment through the automatic route that has been curtailed. But, in India, getting permissions always runs into a wall of redtape.

The RBI has reduced the limit for remittances made by resident Individuals from US$200,000 to US$75,000 per financial year. Also barred is the “acquisition of immovable property outside India.” So, rich Indians can’t buy the Swiss chalet they had set their sights upon.

These measures are described as temporary; they will continue until the crisis abates. “The present set of measures is aimed at moderating outflows,” says an RBI statement. “I am sure that the RBI will revisit it at an appropriate time,” Chidambaram told a TV channel. “This is not to be understood as capital control.”

Two days earlier, it had been Chidambaram in action. He told Parliament that a whole host of measures were on the anvil, including easier norms for companies to raise overseas loans and focusing on deposits from Indians overseas. Some domestic institutions would be allowed to raise quasi-sovereign loans in the international market. This would collectively fetch an additional US$11 billion this year, taking total capital inflows to US$75 billion. He said that curbs on gold and silver imports would be announced soon. There would be fresh duties on “luxuries” and electronic items. The latter will particularly hit Korean companies.

The next day, the RBI stopped import of gold coins and medallions. The government in tandem raised the import duty on gold to 10% — the third increase this calendar year. The earlier hikes may seem to have worked. “The trade deficit in July remained low at US$12.3 billion primarily on gold imports – which remained contained at US$2.9 billion,” says Kapil Gupta, analyst at brokerage house Edelweiss. “Gold imports will be restricted to 850 tons this fiscal against 950 tons last fiscal,” said Chidambaram.

But will the gold tariff hike really work? The government has been targeting the metal since the beginning of this year. But, according to the World Gold Council (WGC), India’s gold demand could reach a record 1,000 tons this year. “The resilience in Indian demand has offset government efforts to curb imports,” says the WGC.

Analysts believe that if all these moves fail, the government may be pushed further down the road of controls. In September, a new RBI governor – Raghuram Rajan – will be taking over. Rajan has a PhD in management from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and has served as chief economist to the international Monetary Fund. But for all his free-market thinking, he may be forced to support controls now.

Meanwhile, the weak rupee has sent inflation to a five-month high of 5.79% in July. The widely used HSBC purchasing managers index for the manufacturing industry fell to 50.1 the same month, marginally higher than 50.3 in June. A level of 50 indicates stagnation.

The prognosis is not good. “We expect continued weakness to 65 through 2016,” says Goldman Sachs. “Allow the rupee to fall to 70,” says S.S. Tarapore, the man who headed the 2006 panel on capital account convertibility. The crisis has clearly some time to go.

India Turns Back the Clock on Reforms | Knowledge@Wharton Today
 
Market carnage fuels fears of India downgrade


MUMBAI: The slump in stock market on Friday — the biggest drop in about two years — on fears of capital controls being imposed by the Reserve Bank of India and indicators of slowing economic growth has fuelled concerns about a potential sovereign downgrade.

Local economists, however, say that the possibility of a downgrade is slim. What also stoked concerns was the ratings downgrade by global ratings firm Moody's of the local currency and the financial strength of three large state-owned banks.

The agency downgraded the financial strength ratings of Bank of BarodaBSE -8.50 %, Canara BankBSE -9.96 % and Union Bank of India by a notch on Friday — a day when the Nifty fell over 4% to 5,507.85 and the rupee recorded a lifetime low of 62.03, before closing at 61.55. Moody's said the downgrades ...primarily reflect the challenges of the current macroeconomic environment , which have been exacerbated by the depreciating rupee and high levels of inflation .

Besides, measures by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to support the currency have failed to stem the fall of the rupee, implying that interest rates may remain elevated for a longer time, the agency said. India's sovereign rating assigned by Moody's is Baa3 with a stable outlook. This is the lowest notch in the investment-grade rating.

Any further downgrade could push the sovereign ratings to a junk status. All other BRIC economies enjoy better sovereign ratings. Among its various emerging market peers, Indonesia, Turkey and Philippines, too, have a rating on a par with India. Earlier in May this year, ratings firm S&P had warned of a one-in-three chance of India's sovereign ratings being downgraded. "We have indicated that compared to one year ago, there (is) some easing of the pressure towards the downgrade of the rating," S&P credit analyst Takahira Ogawa had said.

"But nonetheless there is still more than one-third of chance for downgrade unless we see significant improvement of the factors that we mentioned," he had said. The rating agency said the main drag on India's rating is a high fiscal deficit and heavy government borrowing, although it also said India's position had improved over the past year.

Concerns of a downgrade were shared by a section of the market as the external sector continues to remain weak. "Even if we assume that government will be able to contain the fiscal and current account deficits, a rising external debt to GDP will remain a concern for the ratings agencies," said Partha Bhattacharya , deputy CEO, Mecklai Financial .

Market carnage fuels fears of India downgrade - The Economic Times
 

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