Since then, it has strengthened considerably, touching 63.6 on August 8, 2017. On the RBI’s real effective exchange rate (REER) too, the rupee is overvalued, as shown in Chart 2.
While many have questioned the way this index has been constructed and it also does not account for productivity differentials between countries, the REER does show that the rupee has been consistently overvalued since the previous year. Compare this with the performance of other currencies. Over the same period, India’s export competitors, such as China and Bangladesh, have seen their currency fall by 2.7 and 3.1 per cent, respectively, as shown in Chart 3. Only the Brazilian real and the Thai baht have appreciated.
On the other hand, while imports growth appears to be stronger, it has dipped recently (Chart 6).
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