The Undervalued Rupee
Businessworld|March 26, 2022
A stronger rupee would dramatically cut India’s merchandise trade deficit. Would software exports be affected? Not if they climb up the value chain. And indeed they are doing precisely that
MINHAZ MERCHANT
The Undervalued Rupee
IT’S THE PERENNIAL QUESTION: is the Indian rupee undervalued or overvalued – or indeed, is it currently at its correct value? There’s a strong lobby in India that believes in a weak rupee. Led by exporters, this lobby has over the years successfully created an ecosystem among economists, analysts and the bureaucracy which propagates the belief that a constantly depreciating rupee is good for the Indian economy. So powerful is the impact of this decades-long lobbying that it is now accepted wisdom that a weak rupee is a good rupee.

Are the votaries of a weak rupee right? The answer: no. A constantly depreciating rupee is a Sword of Damocles over the heads of importers. With crude oil prices rising to over $100 a barrel, India’s trade deficit in 2021-22 is likely to hit record highs.

Weak rupee advocates ignore several facts. First, the most successful export leviathan in history, China, with exports of over $3 trillion a year (equal to India’s entire GDP) has never suffered due to a strong yuan. The Chinese currency has been trading at a steady exchange rate of 6-8 yuan per US dollar between 2006 and 2022.

In 2006, the yuan was trading at 7.97 per dollar. In 2022, it is trading at 6.35 per dollar. Thus in 16 years, the yuan has actually strengthened by around 20 per cent against the US dollar.

This story is from the March 26, 2022 edition of Businessworld.

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This story is from the March 26, 2022 edition of Businessworld.

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