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Camera: Athar Rather
Video Producer: Shohini Bose
Video Editor: Vivek Gupta
The government made two major policy announcements in the first week of February 2022 – the Union Budget and the Monetary Policy. In both, it pumped the growth fist but tried to mute three frightening realities looming over India’s economy:
Spiking interest rates and bond yields, spooked by the government’s astronomical increase of Rs 5 lakh crore – a full 50% over the previous year – in gross borrowings
A crashing rupee, beyond 75-to-the-dollar
Spiralling oil prices, dancing perilously close to $100 per barrel
But honestly, just a couple of other smart moves can significantly alleviate this stress – but for that, our Raisina Hill bureaucrats must stop cowering in irrational fears about dollar markets.
Remember 6 July 2019, when the same finance minister had gleefully announced a $10 billion issuance of overseas government bonds? But then, unfortunately, she scuttled it, scared by a volley of uninformed criticism.
If she were to revive that bold idea, it would be a very prudent five percent of the government’s gross borrowing programme and a mere one-and-a-half percent of foreign exchange reserves.
Unfortunately, I can already hear the naysayers, but let’s debunk each objection one-by-one:
Volatile dollar/rupee rates will create “unquantifiable” costs in the long term
Wrong. By paying a premium of five-odd percent to hedge against future dollar rates, our costs will forever be controlled and quantifiable. While the hedged interest rate would be a few basis points higher than what the government could borrow at in local markets, these shall get compensated by the several positives that accrue on venturing overseas, including the fact that private borrowers get more cash in domestic bond markets.
Why go overseas when FPIs (foreign portfolio investors) can now take Rs 1 lakh crore of additional rupee debt in the domestic market?
This one is specious. Because when you float a sovereign bond overseas, you access an entirely new category of lenders, over and above FPIs that are authorised to invest in India.
Foreign investors could indiscriminately dump our bonds, creating a run on the rupee and “importing” contagion
False. Since the bonds will be denominated in dollars and traded on overseas exchanges, any “dumping” would not directly impact the rupee or domestic markets. In fact, the alternative of increased FPI exposure to rupee bonds creates exactly the “dumping risk” that is being wrongly attributed to dollar bonds
While it’s yet to be firmed up, the finance minister virtually confirmed, by estimating her disinvestment proceeds at Rs 75,000 crore for this year, that she will sell only five percent of LIC on NSE/BSE. Since LIC could be valued between $ 150-200 billion (Rs 10-15 lakh crore), the math is obvious. Since many in the government also doubt the ability of Indian markets to absorb over Rs 100,000 crore in one shot, there is talk of breaking up the offer in two tranches of Rs 50,000 crore plus – ie, sell, burp, and sell again.
Now do the arithmetic one more time:
$10 billion from Sovereign Dollar Bonds
$10 billion from the offer of five percent of LIC stock on LSE/NYSE
$30 billion from a tweak to the capital gains tax rules to allow Indian treasuries to list on global bond indices
Bingo! $50 billion flow into India, bond yields soften considerably, and the rupee appreciates against the dollar. No need for desperately silent budgets or monetary policies.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)