The new governor of the Reserve Bank of India, Raghuram Rajan, told
the BBC in his first international interview that India has enough
foreign-exchange reserves to safeguard against a repeat of the 1991
balance of payments crisis.
Rajan said that India has enough money to pay for all of its
short-term debts tomorrow if it needed to, as it has reserves that are
equal to 15% of GDP. This is a key difference from two decades ago when
the country was rescued by the IMF.
He said that a country with $280bn (£175bn) in reserves can finance
itself, and points out that India’s external debt is about 22% of GDP.
He said that very few countries with such low level of debt have had an
external crisis. Rajan was also said anyone who suggests that India
should seek IMF assistance should know that there will be “no IMF, it’s
not going to happen”. And that India is a creditor to the IMF.
He also points out that the current account and fiscal deficits are
falling, which are the sources of concern and why some investors had
left the country. It had resulted in the rupee hitting an all-time low
shortly before Rajan took office in early September. Since then, markets
have risen strongly and the rupee has strengthened and is now
approaching 60 rupees to the US dollar, leading what’s been dubbed the
Rajan rally.
Quite unusually for a central banker, Rajan also revealed that
although he tries not to comment on the appropriate level of the rupee
as he “knows when it has gone too far”. In his opinion, 68 rupees per US
dollar that was hit at the end of August was “too weak”, while 50 is
probably “too strong” relative to the fundamentals of the economy.
In terms of getting the balance right between fighting inflation and
supporting economic growth, Rajan describes the process as “muddling
through”.
He sees the challenge of inflation, especially for food, as stemming
from the growing demand of a population that is getting richer and
demanding more foodstuffs while supply lags behind. He explained that
this is why he has raised rates twice in his first two months in office,
which is to reduce demand a little bit to control inflation while
production catches up.
Of course, to encourage more production in India will require
investment. Rajan recognises this as a structural challenge for India.
For a country at this level of development, manufacturing is a much
smaller part of the economy as compared with services, which are about
60%.
He sees four impediments to India growing its manufacturing sector,
which are infrastructure, education, regulation, and access to finance.
He said that the central bank governor can only affect access to
finance. Thus Rajan acknowledges that there is a limit to what central
bankers can do, but stresses that there are other “rock stars” in the
Indian government that are taking their agreed reform plans forward.
Rajan also gave a timeframe for achieving his “five pillars” that is
to improve the monetary policy framework, reform the banking system,
liberalise financial markets, increase financial inclusion, and sort out
financially distressed institutions. Mr Rajan says that he has a
five-year timetable to achieve these aims and changing the financial
sector will help India to grow.
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