Crisis within a crisis
Chidambaram fights on two fronts
Chidambaram's ultimate failure to win colleagues around is emblematic of the predicament he faces: he must stop investors heading for the hills as economic growth skids to its slowest pace in a decade, but he is surrounded by politicians who haven't grasped that there is a crisis at hand and want to spend their way to the ballot box. Full ArticleREUTERS SHOWCASE
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MUMBAI/NEW DELHI |
(Reuters) - The rupee hit a record low and posted its biggest percentage
fall in 18 years on Tuesday as Lok Sabha's approval of a $20 billion
plan to provide cheap grain to the poor renewed doubts about government
resolve to control spending ahead of elections due next year.The alarm over the fiscal deficit eclipsed an announcement by Finance Minister P. Chidambaram that the government had approved infrastructure projects worth 1.83 trillion rupees, a step aimed at reviving economic growth and shoring up investor confidence.
Instead, the rupee plumbed new depths while shares plunged after Chidambaram spoke due to investor anxiety about a country also facing other challenges, including a record current account deficit and the weakest economic growth in a decade.
Despite measures to address these concerns, including a slew of steps to attract dollar inflows and curb gold imports, Indian policymakers are struggling to instil confidence and end the climate of fear that traders say is gripping currency markets.
In an appearance in parliament in the afternoon, Chidambaram acknowledged the government's need to do more.
"What we need now is not less reforms but more reforms. What we need now is not more restrictions but less restrictions. What we need now is not a closed economy but a more open economy," Chidambaram told lawmakers.
The rupee has lost 17 percent against the dollar so far this year - making it the worst performer by far among Asian emerging market currencies tracked by Reuters - despite frantic attempts by the government and central bank to support it and repeated comments by the finance minister that the rupee is oversold.
The partially convertible rupee slumped to a record low of 66.30 to the dollar, despite central bank intervention to ease the pace of the decline, surpassing its previous all-time low of 65.56 hit last Thursday.
The currency fell 2.9 percent on the day to close at 66.24/25, its biggest single-day percentage fall since October 1995 according to Thomson Reuters data and its biggest fall ever in absolute terms.
Shares also slumped, sending the benchmark BSE index down more than 3 percent and benchmark 10-year bond yields up 44 basis points.
Indian markets have been caught in a downward spiral since May as the prospect for a tapering off in the Federal Reserve's period of cheap money exposes India's vulnerability among emerging markets
"The trinity of the fiscal deficit, slowing growth and an unstable currency is hitting us badly. In addition to these, the government has passed the food security bill which may put fear in the mind of rating agencies," said G. Chokkalingam, managing director and chief investment officer of Centrum Wealth Management in Mumbai.
India's oil minister Veerappa Moily said on Tuesday the country was looking to save $25 billion on oil imports in the current fiscal year, citing a request from the prime minister.
Oil is India's biggest import, with the import bill rising 9.2 percent to $169.25 billion in the year that ended in March.
FISCAL INSECURITY
Worries are growing that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's coalition government will be tempted into a populist spending splurge ahead of the general elections due by May and so will struggle to meet the fiscal deficit target.
The 1.35 trillion rupees Food Security Bill is a key part of the ruling Congress party's strategy to win re-election, with its focus on selling subsidised wheat and rice to 67 percent of India's population of 1.2 billion.
Kotak Institutional Equities said there would be "no free lunch", estimating India's subsidy burden would reach 827 billion rupees from the budgeted 606 billion rupees, citing the costs of procurement, logistics and identifying beneficiaries.
Chidambaram on Tuesday pledged the bill would not lead the government to meet its fiscal deficit target.
"I have already said that 4.8 percent of GDP and the absolute number that was indicated in the budget is a red line. The red line will not be breached," Chidambaram told a morning news conference.
The food bill comes at a time when the government is showing signs of having increased spending since the start of the fiscal year in April, reversing an earlier tight grip, while tax revenues could stagnate amidst a slowing economy.
That is raising concerns about a potential ratings downgrade, although Standard & Poor's is the only one of the three major credit agencies to have a negative outlook on India's BBB-minus sovereign credit rating.
Chidambaram also sought to address concerns about the economic slowdown by pledging to kickstart 36 stalled projects in sectors ranging from oil and gas to roads and railways.
However, analysts say these projects will not take off quickly, while the government has little to show from recent economic reforms.
Its move last year to allow foreign investment in the retail sector has yet to attract a proposal, though its liberalisation of the aviation industry has yielded investment plans from Malaysia's AirAsia (AIRA.KL) and Abu Dhabi's Etihad Airways.
"I don't think these announcements in particular will incrementally have any impact on sentiment until we see visible impact of implementation and execution of these projects," said HDFC Bank chief economist Abheek Barua, referring to the government's drive to energise the infrastructure sector.
(Writing by Rafael Nam; Additional reporting by Abhishek Vishnoi and Archana Narayanan in MUMBAI; Editing by John Chalmers and Neil Fullick)
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Comments (2)
harpat wrote:
Oil is the lifeblood of modern
society and industry and India has to import oil, no choice. To pay for
the oil it has to export, there is no choice though some of it is
financed by NRI remittances. But India got lax and started importing
unnecessary things without developing export industries to pay for them
or manufacture things locally. The FII and FDI deposits were used to
finance the imports and outflows but this is a Ponzi scheme requiring
ever more FDI and FII to pay for not only the imports but the
withdrawals of funds by the foreign companies. This ever increasing FDI
and FII did not materialize so this a kind of impending bankruptcy.
vcsekhar wrote:
The Federal Bank reduction of cheap money is bound to create
mayhem in the financial markets around the world.I suppose the weakened Rupee will hit the roof at 75 to a Dollar.India relies so heavily on the FII investments which will vanish and if the Non Resident Indians working abroad hold back their Dollars,India could see a Greece-like situation happening shortly.The Congress Government won the last Parliament Elections by doling out freebies and is hell-bent on extending such schemes to come back to power.Only God can save the country from this ‘Mickey Mouse Singh’ Prime Minister and the ex-Italian bar maid Supremo.
mayhem in the financial markets around the world.I suppose the weakened Rupee will hit the roof at 75 to a Dollar.India relies so heavily on the FII investments which will vanish and if the Non Resident Indians working abroad hold back their Dollars,India could see a Greece-like situation happening shortly.The Congress Government won the last Parliament Elections by doling out freebies and is hell-bent on extending such schemes to come back to power.Only God can save the country from this ‘Mickey Mouse Singh’ Prime Minister and the ex-Italian bar maid Supremo.
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