India managed rupee float well:IMF

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Press Trust Of India Washington
Last Updated : Jan 28 2013 | 12:57 PM IST
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has given India the thumbs up for its gradual introduction of greater exchange rate flexibility without hiccups even when reforms to policy frameworks were in progress.
 
India carried out the transition from the peg of the rupee to the US dollar in March 1993 and shifted to greater exchange rate flexibility when reforms to policy frameworks were still in progress, the IMF said in this year's 'World Economic Outlook'. The country also maintained the managed float without major distress even during times of international market turbulence, IMF said.
 
After abolishing the peg of the rupee, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had actively intervened in the foreign exchange market to reduce volatility.
 
The exchange rate against the US dollar remained quite stable until the end of the 1990s with occasional shifts at the times of large unfavourable shocks. In the past several years, the IMF said, the RBI has allowed even greater exchange rate flexibility but still maintained many controls on residents' capital account transactions.
 
Giving the background, IMF said financial sector reforms were an important component of India's economic liberalisation programme that started in 1991.
 
The financial sector reforms were implemented gradually, beginning with interest liberalisation, introduction of greater competition in the banking system, measures to develop domestic securities markets and steps to strengthen financial sector supervision, IMF said.
 
In the period after the floating of the rupee, many of the reforms launched in the early 1990s continued to be implemented and enhanced.
 
Moreover, foreign exchange dealers were allowed to use derivatives to hedge their positions and the prudential requirements regarding the risks of foreign exchange exposures were tightened.
 
External financial liberalisation was also gradual and focused on long-term foreign direct investment and equity portfolio inflows.
 
Extensive controls on short-term borrowing were retained throughout the 1990s which, together with the existing prudential norms, limited foreign exchange vulnerabilities in the banking and corporate sectors and increased india's resilience during international financial crises, IMF noted.
 
The policy of maintaining limited external public debt on concessional terms also diminished the exposure of the economy to exchange rate volatility.
 
Monetary policy in India, it said, has traditionally focused on the twin objectives of maintaining price stability and supporting growth.
 
In the first half of the 1990s, a surge of capital inflows pushed inflation higher but in the second half of the decade, the RBI succeeded in keeping inflation low, the IMF said.

 
 

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First Published: Sep 29 2004 | 12:00 AM IST

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