Thursday, 22 August 2013

Govt will not take any captial control action: Chidambaram

DC Online/Agencies | 17 hours 49 min ago

New Delhi: Finance Minister P. Chidambaram asserted again that there is no intention to introduce any capital control measures by the government and RBI, in New Delhi on Thursday.

But the minister maintained that the Indian rupee has overshot its reasonable limits. He said that the Indian currency was not the only one facing volatility.

When asked if there was any action taken against speculators, Chidambaram said unless they violate any law there is no necessity for any action.

While the government is trying to communicate its best intentions, certain stakeholders are distorting and making up their own imaginative stories, he said, which is leading to the overall problem.

The Finance Minister said that there was no need to be pessimistic as FDI inflows have been up and debts are declining.

On the SC ban on mining of coal and iron ore, Chidambaram said that there is an urgent need to open up the mining sectors.

“How can any country become industrialised if it does not make steel?” he asked.

The minister assured that the mining ministry will take up the matter with the Supreme Court.

We have enough reserves to deal with currency woes: RBI

New Delhi: The Reserve Bank today said it has adequate foreign exchange reserves to deal with the declining value of rupee and the widening current account deficit (CAD).

"I believe our forex reserves are adequate to manage current situation," RBI Governor D Subbarao said in a response to whether RBI has enough firepower to defend the rupee, which plunged to an all-time low of 65.56 today.

The country's foreign exchange reserves were up at USD 278.602 billion as of August 9 compared with USD 277.17 billion a week earlier.

After breaching the 65 mark, the rupee made some recovery to settle at a fresh closing level of 64.55, still down by 44 paise today against the US currency on persistent dollar demand from banks and importers and sustained capital outflows.

Subbarao also said the recent measures taken to curb volatility of rupee would continue till stability is restored.

"We have taken those measures again in order to curb volatility, in order to curb certain outflows, and we will revisit them as stability returns," he said, clarifying that "RBI does not take any position on the exchange rate, we are not targetting a level of exchange rate."

RBI took steps on July 15 and 23 to tighten liquidity. These measures were taken to "raise cost of rupee resources at the short end which is in the arsenal of instruments available to central bank to defend against volatility in rupee," he said.

On financing CAD, Subbarao said: "They have to come from FDI, FII, equities flow, FII debt flows and I believe the government has given those numbers that is the joint and shared effort of the government and the RBI."

"Meanwhile, we have to be able to finance the CAD through stable and to the extent possible non-debt creating capital inflows. So that's the effort now."

What the current situation requires is structural measures, he said, adding, "We have structural CAD problem and that requires a structural response but structural measures by definition take time to play in and get the decisive results."

Meanwhile, he said, RBI has been focusing in the last three months especially in the last one month on undertaking stabilisation measures.

"We have to respond as and when necessary and we will continue to do so with the intention and the objective of curbing the volatility in the exchange rate," he said.

Explaining the relationship between rupee depreciation and inflation, the Governor said "latest RBI analysis shows that the elasticity co-efficient has increased, earlier we said that for every 10 per cent depreciation inflation goes by one per cent that co-efficient has increased since to 1.2 per cent and pass through as indicated in the annual report is incomplete."

Asked on why market getting confused signals, he said: "I do admit that since the situation is changing, changing rapidly every day and changing for reasons beyond our control because of external developments because of the sentiments being shaped by what is happening outside the country."

"To some extent we are in reactive mode. As I said earlier sometimes we are anticipating developments, some time we are reacting to the some developments. That's inevitable in situation like this," he said.

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