It's difficult to see how, as the data suggests, there is no link between the rising rupee and export growth. |
Last week witnessed the release of merchandise trade data (on customs-cleared basis) up to November 2007, and also the Balance of Payments data for the first half of the current fiscal year. While the numbers do not support my expectation that the sharp appreciation of the rupee will start impacting the trade and current account numbers, a point I will come to later in this article, there are several puzzling factors: |
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Given that the export performance seems healthy even six months after the sharp appreciation of the rupee, proponents of a market-determined exchange rate believe that exports, or indeed, macro economic growth, have little to do with the exchange rate. With due respect to this view, one is not quite convinced of the conclusion that is being drawn. Before declaring the independence of trade performance from the exchange rate, one needs to keep in mind several other factors:
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As for the last point, namely, exports of labour-intensive manufactures, I firmly believe that the competitiveness of the exchange rate remains a very material factor for economies exporting commodity-kind, undifferentiated manufactures (at the current stage, to my mind, India certainly falls in this category). |
To elaborate, the demand for differentiated, brand-identified exports may not be very elastic to the exchange rate (Mercedes cars, or Sony or Samsung consumer electronics); surely, this is not the case with our exports. Hardly any Indian companies have brands known globally (a few Chinese companies are getting into that league lately); therefore, as of now and perhaps for the foreseeable future, our exports would continue to depend on price competitiveness. And the role of the exchange rate in this should not be under-estimated, whatever the lag between the two. Perhaps the "tipping point" is still to be reached. |
The current account? The RBI has started reporting trade credit as a separate item in the capital account. However, one still has questions about the numbers. From the external debt report as of September 2007, published by the finance ministry, it seems that outstanding trade credit represents just one-and-a-half months of imports, and the proportion has remained unchanged for three years. This is difficult to digest, given the obvious economics and what so many corporates are doing. |
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