Identifying India as one of the five
fragile economies of the world, a senior US official has predicted an uncertain
outlook for its future in view of the next year’s general elections.
“The big question about India now is
what happens in the election next year and who will be the new government.
That’s a very complicated question,” Assistant Treasury Secretary for
International Finance Charles Collyns, said.
“India’s the world’s largest democracy.
It has a multiple of political parties. There’s one party on the right, the
BJP, which would certainly try to push forward pretty aggressive reforms.”
“On the other hand, that party’s also
been associated with less positive social policies, and it’s not clear whether
they will actually gain power even if they become the largest seat holder in
Congress,” Collyns said at the George Washington University’s Elliott School of
International Affairs.
“On the other hand, if you had a
coalition of regional governments, which is another possibility, that would
probably be pretty negative for reforms. So it’s an uncertain outlook,” Collyns
said.
Collyns said India is one of the five
fragile economies of the world. The other four being Brazil, Indonesia, Turkey
and South Africa, he said.
“The ‘fragile five’ are fragile because
they have large current account deficits and they’ve relied heavily on
portfolio capital to finance those deficits.
The “fragile five” suffered particular
steep depreciations in the exchange rate. So gradually over the summer there
was a clear discrimination between the most fragile and other economies,”
Collyns said.
The Treasury official said, the fragile
economies had to take a pretty strong policy response to stabilise their
foreign exchange markets.
“Three of them actually had to increase
their policy rates. Brazil, India and Indonesia raised their policy rates. But
the policy response was much broader than just raising interest rates, as shown
in this chart here,” he said.
“The countries under pressure took a
number of steps. They hiked their interest rates, they took measures to tighten
liquidity, they intervened in the market, they provide foreign exchange swaps,
they provide hedging against foreign currency risks.
They took steps to encourage capital
inflows to try to stir up to protect their position,” he said.
Collyns said India is a country that’s
allowed its current account deficit to widen quite sharply recently. Collyns
lived in India as the IMF’s resident representative for a period in the 1990s.
“I remember the conversations we had at
the time, the IMF encouraging India to increase capital account openness, India
saying, no, we can’t do that because we would be very scared if the current
account deficit were to rise beyond – 3 per cent was sort of the magic number
that they had in mind at the time.
“But typically, they kept the current
account deficit to, like, 1 or 2 per cent, at most,” he said on Wednesday.
Collyns, who was recently in the
country, said India has gone through a tremendous boom of growth, building on
their strengths.
“But they haven’t dealt with a lot of
the underlying structural problems, and they’ve allowed their macro framework
to remain fairly weak,” he said.
“They have a very wide fiscal deficit.
As long as you’re growing fast, you can live with a wide fiscal deficit because
you essentially absorb the debt by growing, but as growth has subsided, then
you get more worried about the fiscal deficit.
So the combination of reforms, big
fiscal deficit means that markets are worried. And India has come under
pressure,” Collyns said.
No comments :
Post a Comment