THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 06 October 2018 (Scalding oil, sliding rupee)
Scalding oil, sliding rupee
Mains Paper: 3 | Economy
Prelims level: current-account deficit
Mains level: Improvement in CAD
Introduction
- Except for the US, most economies of the world are in crisis mode.
- We live in a highly globalised and an instantaneous transmission world.
- We live in a world where politics and economics inter-mingle and each component accuses the other for causing a mishap, or a crisis.
Important highlights about the CAD crisis
- Today, the crisis in question is a rupee current-account deficit (CAD) crisis.
- An improvement in CAD can either occur through an improvement in exports or a reduction in imports.
- Exports is money coming in, and that is “good”. Import is money going out, and that is “bad”.
- Exchange rate is a price — a cheaper rupee helps exports, and hurts imports.
- A cheaper currency, especially a fast depreciating one, hurts confidence, sentiment, and investment flows (both domestic and international) and is not much of a good.
- This is all basic macro, and well known.
- Good policy is the art of balancing the various currents to achieve a harmonious balance.
- Economists and analysts are also human. They make genuine and honest mistakes.
- As humans, they also possess ideologies and are prisoners of their “political” outlook.
Examine some recent policy measures in India
- Emerging economies, especially fast-growing ones like India, need capital inflows to finance their investments.
- The CAD is also equal to the gap in savings and investment.
- The “high” GDP growth over the years helps pay for the borrowing of savings from abroad.
- We will look at measures from the angle of money in (good) and money out (bad).
- This list of economic mishaps for 2018 starts with the imposition of a 20 per cent long-term capital gains tax in the 2018/19 Budget.
- This increase was a reversal of longstanding 14-year policy.
- As is obvious, if you do not have capital gains, you will not obtain capital gains tax revenue.
- For the present fiscal year, capital gains have been zilch.
- In late August, the Ministry of Finance (MoF) announced measures to arrest import growth.
- The 19 items for which import duties were hiked included items such as air conditioners, refrigerators and washing machines and the total value of these imports in 2017/18 was about Rs 86,000 crore.
Effects on the price of oil
- The international price of oil declined from $ 110 a barrel in May 2014 to an average of $50 to $60 in each of the last three fiscal years.
- Despite large international price fluctuations, the government kept the domestic oil price broadly constant.
- On a base of 100 in 2012, the CPI for petrol averaged the following in the last four years — 108 in 2014/15, and 99, 103, 108, and 119 in the present fiscal year (April through September).
- So at the time of the election in May 2014, CPI for petrol was 115.
- The CPI for petrol is estimated to have averaged 126 in September 2018 or a mere 10 per cent above the 2014 election price.
- Oil price control, again:
- On September 4, the government announced an excise tax reduction of Rs 1.5 per litre.
- An additional Rs 1/litre reduction in the price of oil is to be contributed by oil companies.
- This loss to the oil companies is expected to yield Rs 9,000 crore.
- In less than 24 hours since the policy was announced, the market cap of oil companies was reduced by Rs 1.26 trillion.
- It is sound fiscal fundamentals to keep the domestic oil price relatively constant amidst international turbulence.
- The original sin was likely committed by the RBI in keeping real interest rates very high in 2017.
- The GDP is estimated to be 2,900 billion in 2018. Each additional 1 per cent of CAD is $ 29 billion.
Where will this money come from?
- Foreign inflows into the domestic debt market was $20 billion in 2017; this year the flow is a negative $7 billion.
- Oil companies and other investors want predictable, reality-based policies, not inducements to volunteerism.
- The Swiss-based Bank of International Settlements publishes, for more than 60 countries, a monthly estimate of the real exchange rate (REER).
Way forward
- In India, REER averaged around 92 in crisis year 2013 and exports (manufacturing and services) increased at a 6 per cent rate.
- • In 2018 (to date) the REER has averaged 103 and exports have increased at a near 20 per cent rate.
- Two simple facts emerge from these “simple” data.
- REER levels do not seem to be associated with either exports or the desirability of exchange rate change.
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UPSC Prelims Questions:
Q.1) Which one of the following is the largest contributor to India‟s current account deficit in 2017-18?
(a) Manufacturing trade deficit
(b) Gold imports
(c) Remittances deficit
(d) Oil imports
Answer: D