Buoyed by savings of USD 44 billion from drop in prices of oil imports, India's total foreign exchange reserve has reached an all-time monthly average high of USD 328 billion - thus making it the eighth country from the top in terms of foreign reserve, it said yesterday in its semi-annual 'Report to Congress on International Economic and Exchange Rate Policies'.
In its report, the Treasury said weaker outlook is evident across emerging market economies, which exerts a growing influence over global economic prospects. The slowdown in domestic Chinese investment and Chinese demand for imported commodities and components is having wide-ranging implications for other economies, it said.
While Brazil is entering its second year of recession and will not be a source of growth in Latin America, Russia is struggling due to economic mismanagement, lower oil prices, and the impact of economic sanctions, it said.
According to the report, the sharp drop in the price of oil is having a large impact on global current account imbalances. On an annualised basis, the roughly USD 50 per barrel decline in the price of oil is generating shifting income of over USD 600 billion annually from oil exporters to oil importers, holding all else constant, with Europe and Asia the key beneficiaries.