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India has to repay $172 billion debt by March 2014

xhw1986

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Short-term debt maturing within a year is now nearly 60 per cent of India’s total foreign exchange reserves.

Burden triples in six years; outflow will deplete 60 % of forex reserves

The U.S. Federal Reserve’s hint that it could roll back its cumulative easy money policy seems to have suddenly increased India’s vulnerability to slowing capital flows in the near future.

In this context, India’s short-term debt maturing within a year would seem to be a matter of concern against the current backdrop of the declining rupee and the U.S. Fed’s possible change of stance on easy liquidity in future.

Short-term debt maturing within a year is considered by experts as a real index of a country’s vulnerability on the debt-servicing front. It is the sum of actual short-term debt with one-year maturity and longer-term debt maturing within the same year.

India’s short-term debt maturing within a year stood at $172 billion end-March 2013. This means the country will have to pay back $172 billion by March 31, 2014. The corresponding figure in March 2008 — before the global financial meltdown that year — was just $54.7 billion. India has accumulated a huge short-term debt with residual maturity of one year after 2008. The figure has gone up over three times largely because this period also coincided with the unprecedented widening of the current account deficit from roughly 2.5 percent in 2008-09 to nearly 5 per cent in 2012-13. Much of this expanded CAD has been funded by debt flows.

This may turn into a vicious cycle.

More pertinently, short-term debt maturing within a year is now nearly 60 per cent of India’s total foreign exchange reserves. In March 2008, it was only 17 per cent of total forex reserves. This shows the actual increase in the country’s repayment vulnerability since 2008.

Theoretically, if capital flows were to dry up due to some unforeseen events and NRIs stopped renewing their deposits with India, then 60 per cent of the country’s forex reserves may have to be deployed to pay back foreign borrowings due within a year.

A lot of the surge in external debt maturing within the next year is on account of big borrowings by Indian corporates during the boom years after 2004. Corporates became quite heady from their initial growth success and stocked up on huge external debts of 5- to 7-years maturity. The repayment clock is ticking for many of them now.

External commercial borrowings are now 31 per cent of the country’s total external debt of $390 billion as of 31 March 2013. Short-term debt with one year maturity is 25 per cent of total external debt. However, total short term debt to be paid back by the end of this fiscal, which includes a lot of corporate borrowings payable by end March 2014, is 44 per cent of the country’s external debt or $172 billion.

Corporates have managed to roll over their foreign borrowings over the past year because of the easy liquidity conditions kept by the U.S. Federal Reserve. But if the Fed’s easy liquidity stance were to reverse, there is no knowing how Indian corporates will pay back their foreign debt at a depreciated exchange rate of the rupee.

In any case, besides meeting its debt repayment obligation of $172 billion by 31 March 2014, India needs another $90 billion of net capital flows to meet its current account deficit projected at 4.7 per cent of GDP by the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council (PMEAC) for the coming fiscal.

The chairman of the PMEAC, C. Rangarajan, told The Hindu that an otherwise manageable CAD may create a perception of vulnerability in the backdrop of the Fed’s latest stance.

The $172 billion that has to be paid back by March 31, 2014, will no doubt add to this growing sense of unease.

http://www.thehindu.com/business/Economy/india-has-to-repay-172-billion-debt-by-march-2014/article4860979.ece
 
Götterdämmerung;4664736 said:
Every country that has foreign trade must have foreign debt but also holds debt of other countries. The question is the balance of debt and credit.

I have no clue how economy thingy works! Totally blank!
So by the time this det is due, it could increase or decrease?
Has it been this much before?
 
I have no clue how economy thingy works! Totally blank!
So by the time this det is due, it could increase or decrease?
Has it been this much before?

You have understand that doing business with a foreign country is not like going to the next supermarket where one sells and one buys and the transaction end at the cashier, and in 99.9 % its paid in the national currency.

Doing business with a foreign country, you also have to calculate in the risk of currency exchange rate fluctuation (positive and negative) and doing big business also involves a lot of credit taking with the hope to make even more money to repay the debt + interests in due time.

External debt can become a problem when you sell less than you buy and/or the return of profit is smaller than the credit + interests you have taken from a foreign institution.
 
I dont think India will have any problems paying this debt off ...... I have been dealing with Inidan Financial Institutions in cluding Indian Government... the inflows are tremendous and the if i am not wrong ... in 2008 Indian banks were charging clients for keeping funds in USD as they didnot have teh capacity to consume any more USD as Foreign Exchange ....

The only way it will have problem is if trade volumes drop which does not show in the near future looking at the present and future economic and industrial oulook.

Yes If india and Pakistan go to war ... yes then definitely both will have hige financial crisis liek both coutries can be said to have stood up from ashes after 1971 economically by the year 1995 ..... where Pakistan still could not achieve its plans due to its involvement in Soviet - Afghan war .....
 
well this is how econmics works for countries. Every country has debts. It is the capacity to pay back which counts. Right now Indian economy is going strong and they will easily make this payment.
It is the Europeon countries who are defaulting like Greece and Portugal and some were going to default like Spain and Italy.
these countries did not pay back their debts on time and infact are borrowing more to sustain their economies.
 
I trust or politicians, we are not that stupid as some people think.
 
another record low for the rupee against the dollar:
@63.135

the fx reserve as at 16 Aug., 2013 = $278.6 billion ONLY
over 61% of that amount will be gone for the debt unless a roll-over

In any case, besides meeting its debt repayment obligation of $172 billion by 31 March 2014, India needs another $90 billion of net capital flows to meet its current account deficit projected at 4.7 per cent of GDP by the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council (PMEAC) for the coming fiscal.
$172+90 billion = $262 billion so this will leave india with a meagre $16+ billion in the pocket - a repeat of 1991?

Agencies will be pounding on india for a sovereignty downgrade which is salt on a gaping wound

india has the most tyrannical rules to control the economy:
1. people are forbid to buy gold
2. india restricts enterprises on foreign investment
3. india imposes restrict outward remittance amount
what else?

india in the biggest desperation now!

What you think about this?
file

source and breakdown please!

also the years are not matching one another for a meaningful comparison!
 
What you think about this?
file

It's not the Debt to GDP ratio that's important...it's the NET debt and the ability to repay that debt that is important.

Financial centres like HK and Singapore all have huge debt to GDP ratio because of the huge amount of financial trades that go through them...but they earn so much money from those trades that they could pay those debt back and then some.

The problem with India is that they're too reliant on a stable currency and foreign investments to get enough money to pay back debt. They don't have a trade surplus and their forex reserve is tiny for a country its size.

Basically the Indian government put the fate of its people into the hands of foreign investors...the moment they decide that India is not a good investment, the Indian government would have trouble finding the money to pay the debt.

Notice how the moment that the Indian Rupee starts devaluing the government have to start tapping into its forex reserve? That's a bad sign. A government with more stable financials should be able to pay the debt from domestic savings, tax revenue, and trade surplus before needing to use the forex reserve.

This debt problem is also contributing to India's infrastructure problems...The Indian government is basically taking a part of the money that should be used to invest in infrastructure to pay off debt, and this is after the cut taken by corruption and bribes to appease voters.
 
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