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Economists Expect Short-Term Rupee Stability

Jul 23, 2012 6:45 AM   By Dilipp S Nag
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RAPAPORT... The Indian rupee is not expected to fall further in the short term, according to a majority ‎of economists surveyed by the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII). However, the ‎group expects the currency to maintain its current rate of INR 53 to INR 55 against $1  in the long run.‎

The rupee declined by 25 percent through the year to June 30, 2012, outpacing losses ‎experienced even by the troubled euro and British pound, CII stated. The ‎rupee fell by 9.1 percent during the quarter that ended on June 30, CII added. ‎

‎“This impacts economic confidence, builds up inflationary pressures, and hits industry ‎through rising import costs. The high volatility in the rupee has added to the complexity of ‎‎[doing] business in the country,” said Chandrajit Banerjee,  the director-general at CII. “The ‎government and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) need to tackle the underlying ‎macroeconomic problems that lie at the root of the fall in the rupee in order to provide ‎some stability to business conditions.”‎

Respondents in the survey pointed out that the high current account deficit, policy ‎inaction and high fiscal deficit were the main factors for the rupee’s decline.‎

Of the 35 economists surveyed, 60 percent said they expect the rupee will remain at ‎current levels in the medium term, while 40 percent forecast a possible  slide in ‎the exchange rate. A majority of respondents felt that the situation would remain volatile ‎until the end of September 2012.‎

There was greater divergence in their expectations for the rupee rate come December ‎with 40 percent predicting the currency to be at INR 50 to INR 52 to $1. About 30 percent of ‎respondents said they expect a rate of INR 55 to INR 58, while 20 percent forecast a ‎level of INR 53 to INR 55.‎

The survey noted that underlying macroeconomic problems lie at the root of rupee ‎depreciation. The group stressed that government and the RBI need to address these ‎fundamentals for the longer term rather than taking only short-term steps. Some of the ‎suggestions forwarded included to: review the government’s foreign direct investment ‎policy in critical sectors, pay oil companies directly from currency reserves, issue dollar-denominated bonds and further increase in foreign institutional ‎investment (FII) limits in the Indian debt market.‎
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Tags: CII, Dilipp S Nag, Dollar, Exchange rate, India, Rapaport, RBI, Rupee
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