Title: A Seminar by NIRC
1A Seminar by NIRC ICAI on 10.08.2013.Presenta
tion by Mrs.M.Vedavalli
Rupee Impact on Indian Architecture
2Rupees Stability and Monetary Policy
- The Preamble of the Reserve Bank of India Act
describes the basic functions of the Reserve Bank
as - "...to regulate the issue of Bank Notes and
keeping of reserves with a view to securing
monetary stability in India and generally to
operate the currency and credit system of the
country to its advantage." - Financial stability has also become an objective
since 2000 - Monetary Policy was the first line of defence in
a currency crisis.
3The Monetary Policy
4Monetary Policy in Globalised World
- Impossible Trinity Trilemma
- Simultaneous Maintenance of 3 Policy Goals not
possible - Free Capital Flows
- Fixed Exchange Rate
- Independent Monetary Policy
5Monetary Policy in Globalised World
- If Open Economy with Independent Monetary Policy
- Then Drop Fixed Exchange Rate
- If Exchange Rate is pegged
- then forego independent monetary policy
- Indias Position
- Middle Path - giving up on some flexibility on
each of the variables to maximize overall
macroeconomic advantage.
6Indias Middle Path
- (i) Exchange rate largely market determined, but
intervention in the market to smooth excess
volatility and/or to prevent disruptions to
macroeconomic stability - (ii) Capital account is only partly open NO FCAC
- (iii) Because of the liberalization on the
exchange rate and capital account fronts, some
monetary policy independence is forfeited. - Always vigilant on all the three fronts with
emphasis shifting across the three pillars
depending upon the macroeconomic environment.
7Forex Reserves
- In India, foreign exchange reserves are defined
as external assets which are readily available to
controlled by RBI for meeting BoP financing
needs, for intervention in exchange markets to
contain the volatility of exchange rate of the
rupee and for other related purposes.
8Forex Reserves contd.
- At present, reserves include foreign currency
assets of the RBI, gold, SDRs Reserve Tranche
Position in the IMF which conforms to
international best practices as suggested in the
IMF manual. - Since 1993, the RBI has intervened in the forex
market to keep an orderly movement in the value
of the rupee. This approach kept the economy on
track, but now the volatility in rupee movement
threatens its derailment.
9During 2012-13, there was a decline in the
foreign exchange reserves. The sources of
variation in the foreign exchange reserves are
set out in Table below.
10On a balance of payments basis (i.e., excluding
valuation effects), the foreign exchange reserves
increased by US 3.8 billion during 2012-13 as
against a decline of US 12.8 billion during
2011-12. The foreign exchange reserves in nominal
terms (including the valuation effects) declined
by US 2.4 billion during 2012-13 as compared to
a decline of US 10.4 billion during the
previous year .
11Introduction Journey of E.C.
12Phases of EC
- EC has been in existence since 2009
- These 7 decades can be divided into distinct
three phases.
13Structural Reforms initiated
- Announcement of New Industrial Policy 1990.
- Adoption of floating exchange rates based on
market forces, i.e. demand and supply (LERMS /
U-LERMS). - Liberalisation and simplification of the
procedure / documentation. - Delegation of powers to Authorised Dealers.
- Amendment to F.E.R. Act, 1973 in 1993.
- Adoption of article VIII of IMF accepting full
convertibility of current account w.e.f.
20.08.1994. - Constitution of Committee on Capital Account
Convertibility in 1997. - Replacement of FERA, 1973 by FEMA, 1999
- FCAC 2006
14Salient features of FEMA
15Forex Transactions
- Capital account transaction means a transaction
which alters the assets or liabilities, including
contingent liabilities, outside India of persons
resident in India or assets or liabilities in
India of persons resident outside India - Underlying principle current account
transactions which are not restricted are
permitted (negative list) whereas capital
account regulations indicate the transactions
which are permitted (positive list)
16Current account transactions
- Govt. by rules notified under Sec.5 of FEMA,
1999. - Categorized in three schedules
- Sch. I- prohibited items (8)
- Sch. II- subject to Govt. approval (10)
- Sch. III- subject to RBI approval (13)
- All current a/c. transactions are undertaken by
APs under delegated powers.
17Capital account transactions
- Governed by regulations notified by RBI in
consultation with GoI. - Separate regulations for investments, borrowings,
lending, deposits, export and import of currency,
guarantees, surrender of foreign exchange,
foreign currency accounts, remittance of assets,
immovable property, derivative contracts, etc - Most of the transactions could be undertaken
under the general permission
18Need for Rules and Regulations
- India is not fully convertible on Capital
account. - The indicative limits on few current account
transactions are designed for restricting capital
transfers through current account. - Regulating the forex market.
- Realisation repatriation of export proceeds and
surrender of forex earnings are mandatory. - One of the counter party to any forex
transactions should be an AP, licensed by RBI.
19Capital account convertibility- Approach
- It is a process not an event.
- Gradual implementation.
- Guided by FCAC Report and consistent with
macro-economic and global developments and
ability to meet concomitants. - Cautious implementation to avoid back-tracking.
- Extremely cautious about two areas-
- Unlimited access to short term external
commercial borrowings for meeting working capital
and other domestic requirements. - Providing unrestricted freedom to domestic
residents to convert their domestic bank deposits
and idle assets such as real estate in response
to market developments or exchange rate
expectations.
20Lessons from Country Experiences
- Even under fully convertible environment,
prudential safeguards are necessary to insulate
the economies from potential capital account
crises - Gradual approach to liberalization is being used
as a tool for furtherance of sound macro-economic
and prudential policies - Exchange rate flexibility is important while
undertaking capital account convertibility
21Lessons from Country Experiences
- Liberalization can be beneficial when countries
move in tandem with strong macroeconomic
policies, sound financial systems and markets,
supplemented by prudential regulations and robust
supervisory framework, accounting and disclosure
standards - Emerging markets which failed to mitigate the
flows through sterilization had to re-impose
capital controls (recent examples of Thailand,
Colombia, Brazil, etc) or backtracked
22Active capital account management
- A variety of measures to manage the flows for
reducing overheating, currency appreciation and
vulnerability to sharp reversal of flows - Monetary policy measures
- Prudential measures
- Capital control measures and liberalization of
outflows
23Issues and challenges
- The risks of CAC, trigger from inadequate
preparedness in terms of prudential regulation
and supervision, development of markets,
instruments for risk transfer, copious capital
flows, sudden reversal of flows - Actual implementation should be dictated by
macroeconomic conditions, unusual events - Large capital flows and sudden reversals have
warranted a revisit to the policy of
liberalization - Asymmetry in policy related issues- fiscal,
markets, etc
24How Capital Flows?
- Capital flows not steady but volatile.
- Respond to both push and pull factors.
- Push factors the monetary stance of advanced
economy central banks - determines the liquidity
in the global system - the need of global investors for asset
diversification. Pull factors Promise of growth
in Emerging Economies, their stable and credible
policy environments and improved governance.
25Adequacy of Reserves
- To gauge the ability to absorb external shocks
- Traditional approach - in terms of import cover
- Size, composition and risk profiles of various
types of capital flows - Types of external shocks to which the economy is
vulnerable
26Adequacy of Reserves
- Usable foreign exchange reserves gtscheduled
amortisation of foreign currency debts (assuming
no rollovers) during the following year - "Liquidity at Risk" rule that takes into account
the foreseeable risks that a country could face.
27Global Financial Crisis
- Sub- Prime Crisis in USA. Collapse of the leading
US investment banks in August-September 2008. - Problem of contagion across markets, across
institutions and across countries. - Risk aversion, deleveraging and frozen money
markets Increase in the cost of funds - Lesson Irrespective of the degree of
globalisation of a country and the soundness of
its domestic policies, a financial crisis could
spread to every economy.De Coupling Theory
proved wrong
28Impact of Financial Crisis in Indian Real Sector
- Moderation in growth in the second half of
2008-09 in comparison with the robust growth
performance in the preceding five years (8.8
p.a) - Negative growth in industrial output in Q4 of
2008-09 a decline for the first time since the
mid-1990s. - Erosion of external demand affected industrial
performance
29Crisis Impinging on Monetary Policy
- Unprecedented international transmission of
liquidity shocks - Falling asset prices -uncertainty about valuation
of the traded instruments affected market
liquidity - Failure of leading global financial institutions
and the deleveraging process tightened the market
for funding liquidity. - Growing risk of illiquidity cascading into
solvency problems- credit and quantitative
easing acquired priority in most central banks.
30Action Taken
- The contagion warranted swift monetary and fiscal
policy responses to ensure - orderly functioning of markets,
- preserving financial stability,
- Moderating its adverse effects on growth.
- Measures taken for improving domestic and
foreign currency liquidity through rate cuts, CRR
cut, additional liquidity support, Easing of ECB
norms, relaxing interest rate ceiling on forex
deposits, borrowing norms for banks, loans to
mutual funds, introduction of currency futures,
FCEBs etc.
31Aftermath of Crisis
- Quantitative easing policies of advanced economy
central banks. - Global system awash with liquidity.
- Capital flown into EMEs, posing the familiar
problem of capital surges. - The tail risks to global recovery had eased in
the early part of the year.
32Impact
- Changes in the Reserve Banks policy rates were
quickly transmitted to the money and debt
markets. - Transmission to the credit market was slow due to
several structural rigidities in the system,
especially the dominance of fixed term deposit
liabilities in banks balance sheets at fixed
interest rates.
33Growth V/s Inflation Dynamics
- Monetary policy stance over the last two years
has predominantly been shaped by the
growth-inflation dynamics, even as external
sector concerns have had a growing influence on
policy calibration over the last one year. - The current situation moderating wholesale
price inflation, prospects of softening of food
inflation consequent on a robust monsoon, and
decelerating growth would have provided a
reasonable case for continuing on the easing
stance.
34Bernankes Announcement Effect
- Flash turmoil in the financial markets in late
May because of the announcement effect of the
tapering of quantitative easing (QE) by the US
Fed - Market expectations of QE taper and the
consequent increase in real interest rates in the
US have translated into a rapid appreciation of
the US dollar and consequent depreciation of EDE
currencies. - Commodity prices generally softened, but the
price of crude remains elevated.
35Indian Scene
- Risks to growth increased notwithstanding the
robust onset and spread of the monsoon. - Industrial production slumped, with lead
indications of declining order books and input
price pressures building on rupee depreciation.
services sector activity is also subdued in part
because of adverse spillovers from tepid recovery
around the world. - Export performance undermined, even as heightened
volatility in capital flows has raised external
funding risks. - Outflows of portfolio investment particularly
from the debt segment. Ensuing exchange market
volatility. - Wholesale price inflation pressures are on the
ebb, but retail inflation remains high.
36CAD worrying Factor
- Rupee dollar rate touched a record low of
Rs.61.5355 on August 6, 2013 as compared to
Rs.54.2415 as on May 9, 2013. - The CAD moderated to 3.6 per cent of GDP in Q4 of
2012-13, down from 6.5 per cent in Q3, due to
narrowing of the trade deficit. However, for
2012-13 as a whole, the CAD was 4.8 per cent of
GDP, well above the sustainable level of 2.5 per
cent of GDP. - In the current year, the trade deficit widened
during Q1 over its level a year ago, mainly on
account of deteriorating export performance.
Financing came by way of higher FDI, net ECBs and
accretion to non-resident deposits, with some use
of reserves.
37Measures Initiated by RBI GOI
- June 4 To curb import demand, import of gold
on consignment basis was restricted on June 4 - June 5 customs duty was raised
- July 8 Banks restricted to trade only on
behalf of their clients in currency
futures/options markets, exposure norms
tightened, Margins on currency derivatives raised
to check speculative activities. - July 15 MSF rate raised by 200 bps to 10.25 per
cent, overall access by way of repos under the
LAF restricted to Rs.750 billion.
38RBI Measures
- July 18, 2013 Dedicated Special Repo window for
a notified amount of Rs. 250 billion for
liquidity support to mutual funds to tide over
redemption problem. - July 22, 2013 All nominated banks/entities to
ensure that at least one fifth of imported gold
is exclusively made available for the purpose of
exports. Any import of gold under any type of
scheme will have to follow this 20/80 formula.
Consequent to this, the earlier instructions
banning the import of gold on consignment basis
were withdrawn.
39RBI Measures
- July 23, 2013 Access to LAF by way of repos at
each individual bank level restricted to 0.5 per
cent of the banks own NDTL effective July 24,
2013. - The cash reserve ratio (CRR), which banks have to
maintain on a fortnightly average basis subject
to a daily minimum requirement of 70 per cent,
was modified to require banks to maintain a daily
minimum of 99 per cent of the requirement. - August 8, 2013 RBI will auction Government of
India Cash Management Bills for a notified amount
of Rs. 22,000 crore once every week on Mondays.
40Impact on Economy
41Impact on Economy
- Growth projection for 2013-14 is revised
downwards from 5.7 per cent to 5.5 per cent. - Sharp depreciation of the rupee since mid-May is
expected to pass through in the months ahead to
domestic fuel inflation as well as to non-food
manufactured products inflation through its
import content. Price of Imported coal goes up
leading to power tariff increase which in turn
will impact the common man. Supply constraints in
food and infrastructure fuelling inflation. - It comes down to the common man, it leads to
inflationary trends, and therefore it also
affects the interest rates. - CAD gt sustainable level for 3 years in row.
External vulnerability indicators have
deteriorated. Economys resilience to external
shocks is eroded and structural reforms required. - Increase in resources raised by commercial
sector from domestic banks and from abroad,
especially through external commercial borrowings
(ECBs) and foreign direct investment (FDI).
42Reserve Banks Stance
- The four broad contours of monetary policy stance
are - to address the risks to macroeconomic stability
from external shocks - to continue to address the heightened risks to
growth - to guard against re-emergence of inflation
pressures and - to manage liquidity conditions to ensure
adequate credit flow to the productive sectors of
the economy. -
43RBIs Guidance
- The recent liquidity tightening measures by the
Reserve Bank are aimed at checking undue
volatility in the foreign exchange market and
will be rolled back in a calibrated manner as
stability is restored to the foreign exchange
market.
44THANK YOU!!!!