Does the high influx of foreign capital in to India make it susceptible to Dutch disease? Critically Examine. (200 words)
Refer – The Indian Express
Enrich the answer from other sources, if the question demands.
IAS Parliament 6 years
KEY POINTS
Dutch Disease
· It refers to the negative consequences arising from large increases in the value of a country's currency.
· Primarily associated with a natural resource discovery.
· But, it can also result from any large influx of foreign currency into a country, reducing the competitiveness of domestic enterprises, thereby boosting imports and hurting exports.
Are Excess inflows a problem?
· Except three years, all other in the last three decades, India had a current account deficit (CAD).
· Foreign capital in the form of FDI, FPI, or ECB’s funded this excess consumption.
· Foreign capital is not just about financing consumption, often these bring in technology and expertise, and also provide risk capital (which India is short of) and cheaper funding for long-term investments.
· But the persistence of the CAD and the consequent dependence on external flows to keep the currency stable raise questions on sustainability.
How to deal with currency volatility?
· Weaker currency – Half of our goods imports are things that we do not have and another fourth are things that we cannot make.
· A weaker currency will only push local prices of these goods higher — while this may bring down demand for them, this would also mean a broad-based slowdown in the economy.
· A minor decline in the value of the rupee thus is unlikely to drive export acceleration that will narrow the CAD meaningfully.
· And a big depreciation could disrupt the economy for a few years.
· Raising Interest rates – A Conventional approach to protecting the currency is raising interest rates.
· This signals to the currency markets that the economy is willing to bear the pain of a domestic demand slowdown to protect the currency’s value.
· But pushing down growth for the whole economy is perhaps too high a cost.
Way ahead
· Targeted mechanisms to slow these down may help.
· Politically unattractive as they may be, higher retail prices of petrol and diesel may also help.
· Over the medium-term, measures like a change in our energy mix, greater indigenisation of electronics and defence manufacturing, and higher agricultural exports can help the economy get over the worryingly frequent bouts of currency volatility.