India's short-term external debt has shot up by over $1 billion year-on-year to $8.7 billion till March 2006 to surpass the 1991 high of $8.5 billion, mainly due to a surge in oil import bills. |
Short-term debt is considered to be a part of volatile capital flows and accumulation of large size of such debt exposes the economy to external shocks as was witnessed in the South East Asia crisis in 1997. |
|
"Short-term debt has increased during the last two years as trade credits expanded particularly under oil trade," the government said in the Twelfth Status Report on external debt. |
|
Short term debt, which was $8,544 million in 1991, came down to $2,745 million in 2002, and again rose to $8,788 million in 2006 from $7,524 million in 2005. |
|
Generally no rollover of short-term credits beyond six months is allowed and the RBI monitors the stock of short-term debt on an on-going basis. |
|
"Although short-term debt at end-March 2006 was a shade higher than that at end-March 1991 in terms of volume, the ratio of short-term debt to total debt, which measures the sensitivity of short-term debt, recorded a sharp decline from 10.2 per cent in 1991 to 7 per cent in 2006," it said. |
|
India's external debt stood higher at $125.2 billion in March, 2006 from $123.2 billion a year ago. The ratio of short-term debt to GDP has come down to 1.1 per cent in 2006 from 3 per cent in 1991. |
|
Similarly, short-term debt to foreign currency assets ratio has recorded a huge decline from 382.1 per cent in 1991 to 6.1 per cent in 2006. Short-term debt includes all those loans and credits which have the original maturity of one year or less. |
|
|
|