Ok.
So here goes my humble opinion on the matter. What are we most worried about?
My sense (amid all the noise): the spectre of 1991 Balance of Payments crisis
looms large. So here is the pill to the problem (you are welcome to take the
blue one and go back to where you were before you came to this page, I wont take it personally). The big difference
then was our lack of import cover, right now we have more than sufficient cover,
in foreign exchange reserves. Breathe easy, dear reader.
What
else are we worried about? Ah, the international capital flows. True,
investments in the stock markets might be dipping. But did we look at the
latest FDI figures? We hit some record highs there recently. Anyone saw those
nos? No? We have the highest ever FDI flows into the country in FY 12 at US $
46 bn.
This
is good money coming into the country, ladies and gentlemen. Not the
fly-by-night stock market money we are weeping copious tears over. And frankly,
it is not any of the authorities’ job to keep the stock markets from falling.
They did not ask you to invest in them, now did they? You invested knowing the
risks to it fully well, so the bad comes with the good. Hopefully, your risks
have not threatened your financial security. But you believed your investment
advisor did you say? Well that could have serious implications and I am sorry
about it, but we have to agree that it does take the scale of the problem a bit
down, no?
Besides,
who all amongst us have been fretting over those ugly-ugly Industrial
Production numbers we see month after month, raise your hands. See, everyone.
The falling rupee is a great way to address that, since the currency is now
more competitive than ever before. There is also the benefit of employment
generation, since merchandise exports are concentrated in the labour intensive industrial
sectors – gems and jewellery and textiles for instance. Not only does that
encourage growth, it also encourages inclusion. Your blogger, has to admit a
particular bent towards all inclusive policy and supports all minorities across
caste, class, gender, race, region, religion, sexual orientation, disability
and even if you are an Indian version of Lady Gaga (disclaimer: just for
laughs).
So
now, what next? Something about oil imports did I hear? It is true that oil prices
have been falling and what I read says that while the rupee depreciation has
wiped out the gains from this happy event, it has not increased the trade
deficit either. Also, let us not forget in all this worry about oil that it
represents one-third of the total merchandise imports. Two-thirds are still
driven by other factors.

Now
what? Did those imported packets of pasta just became more expensive, dear
consumer? Well, if they have not, they might soon. Sorry. But the good news is,
that is exactly what we need to spur our domestic Pringles (and pasta) industry!
It is bad news on the inflation front, in the short-term at least, I admit. And
that is one of the reasons foreign money is leaving us, you say?
Yes,
the nervous kind is. Also, because of other reasons like the Voldemort of all
crises. Yes, that one, starting with the E, hat must not be named again for
fear that the eyes might start bleeding. But that is no justification. Why cant
we have high growth and contained inflation and high FII flows and a (relatively)
strong currency and manageable fiscal deficit and healthy balance of payments
(who even cared about rising trade deficits then!), just like the good old days
of the mid-2000s? Well, on the only glum note in this entire post, if it seems
too good to be true, it probably is. Think about it.
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