Based on the experiences of various countries, India will have to
put in place adequate safeguards. Full rupee convertibility is a great idea,
but its time is yet to come. What has prompted first the Reserve Bank of India
(RBI) Governor and subsequently the Minister of State for Finance, Jayant
Sinha, to suddenly flag off, at this stage of India’s economy, the issue of
capital account convertibility is not very clear. Indeed, for the past several years,
our policy makers have been struggling to contain inflation, put fiscal consolidation
back on track, strengthen the banking and financial system and build up sufficient
foreign exchange reserves to deal with any eventuality of volatile capital outflows.
In the meantime, the minister is making the case for full capital account convertibility
on grounds that it is needed “if India wants to be a global economy”.
However, neither a new policy format nor a time frame is indicated
for this. The RBI Governor is reported to have said that “we hope to get full
capital account convertibility in a short number of years.” India has
progressively moved towards full current account convertibility, which
comprises of external transactions on the current account – namely, payments
and receipts for imports and exports of goods and services as well as similar
transactions on invisible account like services. Over the last two decades,
significant progress has also been made in the area of capital account
convertibility.
Thus, within certain sectoral limits, all capital inflows,
including foreign direct investment (FDI) are fully convertible. Likewise,
under the Liberalized Remittance Scheme, all resident individuals are now
allowed to freely remit up to US$250,000 annually for any permissible current
or capital account transaction or a combination of both. This calibrated
strategy towards rupee convertibility on both current and capital account has
been widely commended internationally. In particular, this enabled our economy
to combat the adverse fallout of the Asian Meltdown in August 1997 as well as
of the Global Financial Crisis in 2008-09. It needs to be recalled that during
both these events, occurring in a span of just over a decade, extreme
volatility of capital flows aggravated the economic crisis in many countries. Thus,
the international community, including the International Monetary Fund (IMF),
came to refocus its attention on the risks of open capital account,
particularly with respect to short-term flows and its implications on the
health and stability of the financial system in emerging markets like India.
Pre-Conditions for Capital Account Convertibility What, then, are
the essential building blocks for full capital account convertibility? And how
soon can we aspire to achieve them? Various expert committees have, from time
to time, recommended certain basic norms which need to be fulfilled for moving
towards full convertibility. These include:– Sustainable fiscal management
(fiscal deficit to GDP ratio firmly reined in at 3 to 3.5% of GDP);– Financial
stability manifesting in healthy banking – with sound capital structure (i.e.
healthy capital adequacy ratio), manageable non-performing assets (NPAs), 100
per cent marked-to-market valuation of banks’ investments, etc;– Rigorous
inflation targeting (a desirable inflation rate ~3%);– Sound exchange rate
management – a neutral real effective exchange rate or REER band (+/- 5%) to be
monitored by the RBI; and– Control over short-term external debt, reduction of
the external debt service to total export earnings (goods & services) ratio
from 25 per cent to 20 per cent , forex reserves to be not less than six months’ imports, etc. Where are we with
respect to such rigorous standards? India is delicately poised in most of these
areas. Take the case of the latest Budget. Given the tight fiscal position,
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has been compelled to phase out his commitment
towards fiscal consolidation over a longer time horizon, with the target of
fiscal deficit of 3% of GDP being achieved now only in 2017-18.
Second, in terms of the recently signed Monetary Policy Framework
Agreement, the RBI has to stay focused on gradual and durable disinflation in
the economy, with a medium-term consumer price inflation (CPI) target of 4%
(+/- 0.2%). Over the past three-odd years, with a stubbornly stiff monetary
policy stance, the RBI could tame CPI inflation to its current level of 5.2%.
But still, these are uncertain times. Going forward, this effort needs to be
sustained around the crucial mid-point of 4%.
Third, our banking and financial sector is in the midst of
significant transformational changes. The next two to three years are going to
be crucial, with the emergence of a whole set of new banking institutions, be
it payments banks, small finance banks, postal bank or a more vigorous foray
into mobile/ digital banking. Even the existing banking institutions are going
to see tremendous changes with their consolidation, restructuring and new
business orientation. At a time when this mainstay of full rupee convertibility
is being reformed, the policy makers would have to be extra cautious in pushing
ahead the patently aggressive reforms agenda of full capital account
convertibility.
Lastly, in the global context too, there is a series of risk
factors. While reflecting on the World Economic Outlook, the latest IMF report
points out that, apart from significant upside risk from oil prices and
intensification of geopolitical tensions, “disruptive asset price shifts in
financial markets remain a concern…triggers for turmoil include changing
expectations about these elements as well as unexpected portfolio shifts”.
Equally significant are the RBI’s own concerns in its latest
monetary policy. Thus, it highlights growing risks associated with [a] record
high asset prices in many economies on account of “ultra-low interest rates and
reduction in risk premia”; [b] high portfolio flows to emerging market
economies or EMEs (including India), and the possibility of sudden shifts in
market sentiments; and [c] large and volatile movement of exchange rates,
especially the sharp strengthening of the US dollar. This is quite apart from
the RBI’s persistent apprehensions about the emerging inflation scenario in the
country.
A Fascinating Policy Proposition, But…What transpires, therefore,
is the fact that full rupee convertibility may be a fascinating policy
proposition, and its implementation would perhaps unleash many growth
opportunities associated with globalization and a maturing modern economy for
India. Even the IMF, which, prior to the 1997 Asian Meltdown was so vigorously
pushing countries to move towards full capital account convertibility, has been
extremely cautious on this score in recent years. Hence, based on the
experiences of various countries over the last decade or more, India will have
to put in place adequate safeguards – and all those have been reiterated by
various expert committees from time to time. But somehow, we have missed out
both on the sequencing of those major milestones and in accomplishing their
substantive desirable outcomes. The message is clear: full rupee convertibility
is a great idea, but its time is yet to come.
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