If two million jobs can be lost due to the rupee appreciating, macro-policy just has to address this. |
Last Monday, the commerce minister informed Parliament that job losses in the export sector could be as high as two million, primarily because, at the current exchange rate, Indian goods are not competitive. Articles and editorials in media have also commented on the issue. I have consistently argued against an overvalued exchange rate, in the interest of investment, growth and employment creation which, to my mind, need to remain the primary objectives of macro-economic policies. |
Many people in authority are advising exporters to adjust to the strong rupee: exporters are, of course, doing so and this has been reflected in the layoffs referred to by the commerce minister. The other response is that many companies are planning to start units in more competitive environments like China and Vietnam. The exchange rate policy is thus promoting investment and job creation abroad. |
Several myths are being propagated on the subject, that: |
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As for intervening in the exchange market, some argue that "intervention is not only unnecessary; it is ineffective" (Roman Frydman and Michael Goldberg, ET, Nov 17), given the market size. This argument does not seem very convincing: central banks become effective more through changing expectations than as a direct impact of interventions either in the money or exchange markets. While on the subject, I find the difference between some analysts' stance on the domestic and external values of money to be difficult to understand. It is universally accepted that the primary duty of a central bank is to protect the domestic purchasing power of the currency, by keeping inflation under control. For this purpose, they intervene in the money market by targeting either the cost of money (that is, interest rates) or the quantity of money (that is, money supply). If maintaining the domestic value of the currency and intervening in the market in pursuit of the objective is legitimate, I do not understand why the external value is considered too holy and, therefore, not to be polluted by central bank intervention "" when, in a rapidly globalising economy, the external value is so important to growth and employment. |
To my mind, no amount of "sops" will work. The continuation of the existing policy will damage more and more the economy's capacity to create jobs and we should not fool ourselves otherwise. |
Complex Derivatives As regular readers of my column would recall, I have been a consistent critic of complex, structured derivative products marketed in India to relatively unsophisticated customers, who too often did not understand the implications, let alone the reasonability of the pricing, of these products. As Lord Charles Aldington of Deutsche Bank UK said about some German investors in credit derivatives, "it is not clear that the investors fully understand what they were buying" (Financial Times, Dec 5), this is true in spades of Indian companies-marketed fiendishly complex products. |
But, as a student of derivatives market, I believe that the suitability and appropriateness, and regulatory compliance, of many of these transactions, are key issues. To end the article, here is a quote from Nobel Laureate Paul Samuelson: "As one of the economists who helped create today's newfangled securities, I must plead guilty: these new mechanisms both mask transparency and tempt to rash over-leveraging." (International Herald Tribune, Nov 19) |
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