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Ajay Shah: Fix both distortions at once
Ajay Shah / New Delhi January 16, 2008
Distortions in the rupee-dollar exchange rate and petroleum product prices should be eased.
 
There are two key controlled prices in India: the rupee-dollar exchange rate and the prices of petroleum products. In both cases, the process of market price adjustment is held back by the government. As a consequence, the apparent inflation of the economy is wrongly perceived in the standard data. Some estimates of the relationships are as follows. A change in the INR/USD impacts on the overall WPI: a 1 per cent depreciation of the rupee shows up in the third week with a 0.1 per cent rise in the WPI, going till a 0.15 per cent rise in the 10th week. A 1 per cent rise in the WPI fuel gives an immediate impact of 0.15 per cent in the WPI, going up to 0.2 per cent in the 3rd week, and tapering off in roughly 10 weeks.
 
While the role of the government in fixing prices in the economy has diminished over the years, two key areas where government makes decisions are the rupee-dollar exchange rate and the prices of petroleum products.
 
In the case of the WPI fuel, the latest data show a zero change in WPI fuel on a year-on-year basis. The price of the “Indian basket” of crude oil, expressed in rupees, shows a 40 per cent rise when compared with a year ago. This suggests that there is a pent-up need for an increase in petroleum products. In similar fashion, the RBI has engaged in massive and unprecedented purchases of dollars in September and October (roughly $12 billion a month). This suggests that there is a pent-up need for an appreciation of the rupee.
 
When the government is preventing market forces from operating in these two areas, the standard inflation data are faulty. When the rupee is prevented from appreciating against the USD, prices of imported goods are exaggerated, and the apparent inflation is overstated. The footprint of the exchange rate is bigger than meets the eye, because many local transactions are priced at world prices in what is called “import parity pricing”. When the global rise in oil prices is not passed on into local prices of petroleum products, prices of fuel are artificially kept down, and the apparent inflation is understated. In order to think effectively about these questions, quantitative estimates of these effects are required.
 
The relationships under examination — such as the extent of import parity pricing in the economy — have been evolving over the years. For example, when customs duties come down and infrastructure gets better, the extent of import parity pricing goes up. Hence, we set about doing this using weekly data from July 2002 onwards. This recent period is utilised in order to capture the recent nature of the relationships. In all cases, the inflation data that are analysed are the year-on-year percentage change.
 
In the case of the exchange rate, a 1 per cent depreciation (on a y-o-y basis) of the rupee-dollar exchange rate initially has no effect on the y-o-y change in the WPI. The first statistically significant effect — of roughly 0.1 per cent — shows up with a lag of three weeks. This effect slowly enlarges, reaching a value of 0.15 per cent by the 10th week. The impact is statistically significant beyond 10 weeks also.
 
These effects work in reverse, of course, with an appreciation of the rupee-dollar. A 10 per cent rupee appreciation would yield reduced y-o-y WPI inflation to the tune of 1 percentage point by the 3rd week going to roughly 1.5 percentage points by the 10th week.
 
Petroleum products are a sub-component of WPI Fuel. Petrol makes up 6.2 per cent of the WPI Fuel, kerosene is 4.8 per cent and HSD is 14.2 per cent. While these are significant weights, it is important to remember that WPI Fuel is much more than the controlled prices for petrol, kerosene and HSD.
 
We find that a 1 per cent rise in WPI Fuel, on a y-o-y basis, yields an immediate impact of roughly 0.15 per cent, going up to 0.2 per cent in week 3. After this, the size of the effect tapers off, losing statistical significance by the ninth week.
 
There are interesting differences between the impact of a change in the INR/USD exchange rate against the impact of a change in WPI Fuel. In the latter case, there is an instant effect, while the INR/USD has no impact in the first two weeks. The WPI Fuel generates a bigger impact of 0.2 per cent in the third week. But the impact of the WPI Fuel rapidly fades away and is statistically insignificant by the 10th week. In addition, there is no statistically significant impact of the WPI Fuel on the CPI-IW.
 
This strategy for data analysis can also be applied to understanding the behaviour of the politicians when it comes to changes in WPI Fuel. When the price of the Indian basket of crude oil, expressed in rupees, is 1 per cent higher on a y-o-y basis, what happens to WPI fuel? The evidence shows that roughly nothing happens for three weeks, but a statistically significant impact is visible from week 4 to week 10. By week 10, the size of the impact is roughly 0.6. This gives us an idea about the lags in the behaviour of administered prices, on average. The story on the government’s decisions on the rupee-dollar pegged exchange rate is more complex, where there the primordial urge to peg comes into conflict with monetary policy distortions.
 
An interesting political bargain that could be struck is one where changes in WPI Fuel are offset by changes in the INR/USD exchange rate. A decision to have a 10 per cent rise in the WPI Fuel could be offset with a 10 per cent appreciation of the rupee-dollar exchange rate. By the 10th week, the net effect is slightly negative. In addition, a rupee appreciation induces a lower price of the Indian basket of crude oil, thus helping to reduce the size of the distortion in petroleum prices. This “package deal” could thus deliver a slight reduction in prices while reducing the distortions in the economy in two key markets. It would clear the slate for the UPA in the period leading up to this last budget and last year prior to the elections.
 
In summary, the last two important places where the government largely sets prices are the rupee-dollar exchange rate and petroleum products. The best political package would be one where distortions in both markets are simultaneously eased.

 
 

Ajay Shah: Fix both distortions at once
Ajay Shah / New Delhi Jan 16, 2008, 05:43 IST

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Posted by: skmishra10
Two distortions and a house of cards! I am afraid that should have been caption to a well-researched piece. Supposing that the Govt intervention goes,can we be reasonably sure that the WPI shall drop and the BOP remains positive ? One may also ask: are these necessary? In sixty years of our political economy, the costs of development were paid with no visibility and objectivity to get votes. Let that system continue unless we are ready for a transparent and accountable replacement.
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