Date: |
22-04-2014
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Subject: |
India has administered the wrong medicine to cure its CAD problem
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India's current account deficit (CAD) shrank to a mere 0.9 per cent of GDP in the third quarter of 2013-14 from a record 6.5 per cent for the same period in the previous year. The CAD for 2013-14 is on track to be lower than 2.5 per cent of GDP. This is a commendable outcome. The question is, can this lower CAD be sustained?
The large CAD had increased India's external vulnerabilities during July-September 2013, resulting in a sharp depreciation of the rupee after the US Fed's taper talk. India not only became part of the "Fragile Five", including Indonesia, Turkey, Brazil and South Africa, all countries with large CADs, but had the dubious distinction of leading the pack with the rupee being the worst performing currency.
Imports More Than Exports
In simple terms, the CAD shows that the economy is importing more goods and services than it is exporting. For an emerging economy like India with high domestic demand, it is neither unusual nor negative to incur a CAD if two conditions are satisfied. One, that imports contribute to capacity expansion and productivity enhancement, not merely to consumption.
Two, CAD can be financed by non-debt-creating capital inflows. But persistently high CAD with declining foreign currency reserves increases macroeconomic vulnerability to external shocks and puts the domestic currency under pressure. Therefore, the current decline in CAD is welcome news.
However, a word of caution. The current decline in CAD is due to a lower trade deficit achieved through a massive fall in gold and capital goods imports. Gold imports declined on average by 75 per cent during the six months from August 2013, accounting for nearly 60 per cent of the fall in aggregate imports.
The decline in capital goods imports of 14.7 per cent between July and February, the sharpest after gold, was a direct result of a deteriorating investment climate. Moreover, non-oil, non-gold imports also declined due to weak domestic demand and faltering growth.
Smugglers' Pound of Gold
Media reported that seizures of illegal gold had increased 150 per cent during the first 10 months of 2013-14. So, these restrictions on gold imports will have to be removed to prevent the reemergence of organised gold smuggling and the associated mafia, and rechannelling of remittances.
Capital goods imports will also increase sharply once economic growth picks up speed. CAD will start rising again. Therefore, a sustainable reduction in CAD cannot be achieved without improving export competitiveness.
Another way to look at CAD, not often discussed, is that it is equal to the gap between total savings and investments. The gap between the higher investment and lower domestic savings is met by inflows of external savings, which is reflected as the CAD. The worsening CAD since 2008 was a result of a sharp fall in domestic savings by a huge 6.7 per cent of GDP, twice the decline in investments, and, therefore, unsustainable.
Of the three major components of savings, household, corporate and public, public savings declined most sharply by 4.8 per cent of GDP during 2008-10. This was a result of the Centre's fiscal deficit ballooning to 6.5 per cent from 2.5 per cent of GDP. Households, who maintained their savings levels, shifted them to physical assets as low nominal returns on financial investments and high inflation resulted in negative real returns, making gold and real estate more attractive.
Source:- economictimes.indiatimes.com