http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/opinion/columnists/swaminathan-s-a-aiyar/why-the-rupee-can-keep-falling/articleshow/22199452.cms

Why the rupee can keep falling
By Swaminathan S Anklesaria Aiyar, TNN | 1 Sep, 2013, 09.36PM IST



People ask me, will the exchange rate go to Rs 70 to the dollar? I reply,
why not Rs 80?

Indian analysts are in denial. They don't dare face up to the full
consequences of the global financial hurricane originating in the US. This
will keep blowing for 12-18 months.

To revive the US economy, the Federal Reserve has been pumping out $85
billion of cash per month (called quantitative easing). With the US economy
recovering, the Fed plans to reduce this cash bonanza in stages to zero.
Emerging markets like India have long enjoyed a slice of this $85 b/month.
Not only will fresh flows stop, older flows will reverse to the US, a net
turnaround of hundreds of billions.

This storm has knocked the
rupee<http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/topic/rupee> down
almost 25% in two months. It is the first of many storms that will hit not
just India but the whole developing world, with every tightening of the
money tap by the Fed.

Expect a second Asian Financial
Crisis<http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/topic/Asian-Financial-Crisis>.
This will cause much less damage than the earlier one in 1997-99. Then,
Asian countries had low forex reserves, excessively high debt, and
semi-fixed exchange
rates<http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/topic/exchange-rates>.
Learning from 1997, Asian countries (including India) now have large forex
reserves, less debt, and floating exchange rates. This makes them far more
resilient, so they will not collapse as in 1997. But they will suffer
substantial damage. Countries with large current account deficits like
India will suffer the most. But even Malaysia, which runs a surplus, has
seen its currency crash 10%.

A crashing currency raises the prices of all items that can be imported or
exported. This erodes people's purchasing power — by maybe 2.5 to 3%
of GDP<http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/topic/GDP> in
India's case. That is hugely recessionary, as is already evident in the
latest data showing falling production of services as well as manufactures.

Such a recession can, in theory, be combated by monetary and fiscal
stimuli, as in 2008. But today money must be kept tight to check
inflation<http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/definition/inflation>,
so no monetary stimulus is possible. Finance Minister P
Chidambaram<http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/topic/P-Chidambaram>
has
sworn to limit the fiscal
deficit<http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/topic/fiscal-deficit> to
4.8% of GDP, so no fiscal stimulus is possible either. With GDP growth and
revenues falling far below budgeted numbers, and oil and fertiliser
subsidies rising, he will have to slash Plan investment to meet his fiscal
target.

The breach will not be filled by private investment — few businessmen will
invest when domestic demand is collapsing. So, the economy will spiral
downwards.

One theoretical solution is use a depreciated currency to stimulate
export-led growth. If exports grow 20% per year for two years, that will
help weather the storm. However, as we found in 1997, when all developing
countries are hit, all cannot suddenly increase exports at the same time:
the West lacks enough absorption capacity. Besides, India's investment
climate is terrible — files just don't move, with or without bribes. Many
Indian companies would rather invest abroad. Politicians are more focused
on distributing goodies before the election than on slashing red tape.

Finance ministry analysts say the equilibrium exchange rate is Rs 58-60 per
dollar. They say irrational panic has caused overshooting, and economic
fundamentals will soon force the dollar's value back to Rs 60.

Warning: similar things were said when Asian currencies began to slide in
1997. Far from recovering, they crashed further. The Indonesian rupiah went
from 2,500 per dollar <http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/topic/dollar> all
the way to 18,000.

Why so? Because when a currency crashes, that itself changes the economy's
fundamentals. Domestic purchasing power falls, causing a recession. Prices
shoot up, negating the positive effects on exports. Corporations that have
borrowed abroad heavily go bust. Banks that have lent to such borrowers
(and others hit by recession) cannot recover their loans. International
rating agencies downgrade such economies, inducing further capital flight.

India's fundamentals have already changed. GDP growth in the first quarter
is down to 4.4%. It could fall to 3.5-4% over the full fiscal year. A
slowing economy will help reduce the current account deficit, but hit the
fiscal deficit. Wholesale prices had been falling but are accelerating
again, dampening purchasing power. All industries face slowing revenues and
rising costs, eroding profits. Tax revenue may grow by hardly half the
budgeted estimate of 19%.

Disinvestment can happen only at throwaway prices. Chidambaram is a
determined disciplinarian, but may be powerless to stop global hurricanes.
The threat of a credit downgrade has become very real.

Right now, there is a lull in the financial storm, and the rupee has
regained some ground. But this storm will blow, off and on, for 12-18
months. Gird your loins.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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