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West Keeping Indian Economy Afloat in Post Cold War World

RiazHaq

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Haq's Musings: Can Indian Economy Survive Without Western Money?

India runs massive current account deficits. Its imports far outstrip exports year after year. According to the Reserve Bank (RBI) data, in the April-December 2014 period of last fiscal, India's current account deficit stood at $31.1 billion or 2.3% of GDP.




In spite such large recurring deficits, India has built up over $300 billion in foreign exchange reserves. How does it do it? The simple answer is: Foreign money inflows in the form of debt and investments mainly from the West keep the Indian economy afloat.

These inflows have dramatically increased with western support for India in the post Cold War world. Here's how Indian journalist Pankaj Mishra explains the larger western interest driving this phenomenon:

"Seen through the narrow lens of the West’s security and economic interests, the great internal contradictions and tumult within these two large nation-states (India and Pakistan) disappear. In the Western view, the credit-fueled consumerism among the Indian middle class appears a much bigger phenomenon than the extraordinary Maoist uprising in Central India".
Here's how the Asian Development Bank (ADB) describes the rising inflows of foreign, mainly western, capital into India:
"Gross capital flows have increased nearly 22 times from $42.7 billion in 1991-92 to over $932.3 billion in 2010-11. As a share of GDP, this amounted to an increase from 15.5% in 1991-92 to 55.2% in 2010-11. Much of the increase in financial integration occurred between 2003-04 and 2007-08. Given the impressive economic performance indicated by close to 9% growth rate, higher domestic interest rates and a strong currency, India's risk perception was quite low during 2003 to 2007. Furthermore, this period was associated with favorable global conditions in the form of ample liquidity and low interest rates in the global markets—the so-called period of Great Moderation."

Many other economies have been growing faster and producing higher investor returns than India. So the returns do not justify the increased capital flows. Such flows are driven much more by the changing geopolitics of South Asia region and the world since the end of the Cold War in early 1990s. Without these inflows, Indian economy would collapse and India would be at IMF's door seeking last resort loans.

Lesson: Geopolitics drive economy. It's the reason for over a trillion dollars of western capital flow into India since the end of the Cold War. It also explains China's massive $46 billion investment commitment in Pakistan agreed during President Xi Jinping's state visit to Islamabad.

Related Links:

Haq's Musings

India's Soaring Twin Deficits

Xi Jinping's Pakistan Visit

How Strategic Are China-Pakistan Ties?

India Pakistan Economic Comparison in 2014

Pakistan's KSE-100 Outperforms India's Sensex

India's IT Exports Highly Exaggerated

Is India Fudging GDP to Show Faster Growth Than China?

Haq's Musings: Can Indian Economy Survive Without Western Money?
 
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@RiazHaq

I beg to differ. One major source of inflows for Indian market is remittances, which amount to $80 billions. That effectively nullifies their trade deficit. Before 1991. India was a closed economy, highly regulated and protective. After 1991, with liberalization policies, India start growing at amazing pace. I dont know, how much this is sustainable in future, but right now, its in their favor. With huge market and man power, near future looks good for India and it depends upon how their leadership meets the challenges.
 
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@RiazHaq

I beg to differ. One major source of inflows for Indian market is remittances, which amount to $80 billions. That effectively nullifies their trade deficit. Before 1991. India was a closed economy, highly regulated and protective. After 1991, with liberalization policies, India start growing at amazing pace. I dont know, how much this is sustainable in future, but right now, its in their favor. With huge market and man power, near future looks good for India and it depends upon how their leadership meets the challenges.

Current account deficit includes remittances.
 
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The article failed to recognize the contribution of "invisible" in BOP in current account of India for example: Export of services,Earning from tourism and contribution of IT sector which contribute around $75 ~ billion in 2014 Alone.



Current Account:


Current account includes all those transactions which give rise to or use up national income. Thus, the Current Account consists of two major items
1.
Merchandise exports and imports

2.
INVISIBLE exports and imports.


Please note that the Merchandise exports, which refer to sale of goods abroad, are credit entries because all transactions giving rise to monetary claims on foreigners represent credits.



Merchandise imports, i.e., purchase of goods from abroad, are debit entries because all transactions giving rise to foreign money claims on the home country represent debits. Merchandise imports and exports form the most import international transactions of most of the countries.



The Merchandise imports and exports are the most import international transactions of most of the countries.



Invisible Exports refer to the sale of services. The export of services is credit entries and invisible imports, i.e., purchase of services, are debit entries.



Please note the following:

The Expenditure of Foreign Tourists in India is a Credit entry because it is an invisible export.


Income such as interests or dividends, received from the loans and investments made abroad is are invisible exports, so they are counted as credit entries.


Purchase of foreign services like transport and insurance, tourist expenditure abroad and income paid on loans and investments (by foreigners) in the home country form the important invisible entries on the debit side. This is a debit entry and deemed to be invisible imports.


In India, the Software exports have emerged as a very important invisible item of India’s current account.


Business Standard


Tourism earning

Hospitality Industry, Development of Tourism in India, Indian Hotel Industry

India's exports to reach $750 billion by 2018-19: FIEO - timesofindia-economictimes


India's IT sector seen at $200 billion in five years: Top stock bets - timesofindia-economictimes
 
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The article failed to recognize the contribution of "invisible" in BOP in current account of India for example: Export of services,Earning from tourism and contribution of IT sector which contribute around $75 ~ billion in 2014 Alone.



Current Account:


Current account includes all those transactions which give rise to or use up national income. Thus, the Current Account consists of two major items
1.
Merchandise exports and imports

2.
INVISIBLE exports and imports.


Please note that the Merchandise exports, which refer to sale of goods abroad, are credit entries because all transactions giving rise to monetary claims on foreigners represent credits.



Merchandise imports, i.e., purchase of goods from abroad, are debit entries because all transactions giving rise to foreign money claims on the home country represent debits. Merchandise imports and exports form the most import international transactions of most of the countries.



The Merchandise imports and exports are the most import international transactions of most of the countries.



Invisible Exports refer to the sale of services. The export of services is credit entries and invisible imports, i.e., purchase of services, are debit entries.



Please note the following:

The Expenditure of Foreign Tourists in India is a Credit entry because it is an invisible export.


Income such as interests or dividends, received from the loans and investments made abroad is are invisible exports, so they are counted as credit entries.


Purchase of foreign services like transport and insurance, tourist expenditure abroad and income paid on loans and investments (by foreigners) in the home country form the important invisible entries on the debit side. This is a debit entry and deemed to be invisible imports.


In India, the Software exports have emerged as a very important invisible item of India’s current account.


Business Standard


Tourism earning

Hospitality Industry, Development of Tourism in India, Indian Hotel Industry

India's exports to reach $750 billion by 2018-19: FIEO - timesofindia-economictimes


India's IT sector seen at $200 billion in five years: Top stock bets - timesofindia-economictimes

RBI report excerpt:

India depends upon capital flows to bridge the CAD. Foreign Direct Inflows (FDI) and portfolio investments constitute a major share of the flows. Debt flows, External Commercial Borrowings, in particular, have gone up substantially but, as a share of total capital flows, debt flows have declined from 80 per cent in 1990-91 to about 30 per cent in 2011-12. Total capital flows reached a peak of US$ 107 billion in 2007-08 but collapsed to about US$ 7.2 billion in 2008-09 indicating volatile nature of such capital flows. In the current fiscal year so far, India has witnessed a net inflow of about US$ 25 billion in the form of FDI and about US$ 36 billion as portfolio flows as against about US$ 21 billion and (-) US$ one billion respectively in the corresponding period of the last year. During 2014-15, capital flows would be more than adequate to finance CAD.

Reserve Bank of India - RBI Bulletin
 
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RBI report excerpt:

India depends upon capital flows to bridge the CAD. Foreign Direct Inflows (FDI) and portfolio investments constitute a major share of the flows. Debt flows, External Commercial Borrowings, in particular, have gone up substantially but, as a share of total capital flows, debt flows have declined from 80 per cent in 1990-91 to about 30 per cent in 2011-12. Total capital flows reached a peak of US$ 107 billion in 2007-08 but collapsed to about US$ 7.2 billion in 2008-09 indicating volatile nature of such capital flows. In the current fiscal year so far, India has witnessed a net inflow of about US$ 25 billion in the form of FDI and about US$ 36 billion as portfolio flows as against about US$ 21 billion and (-) US$ one billion respectively in the corresponding period of the last year. During 2014-15, capital flows would be more than adequate to finance CAD.

Reserve Bank of India - RBI Bulletin
what about it ?

It says $ inflow has increased compared to previous year and would be more than adequate to finance CAD.
 
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@RiazHaq

I beg to differ. One major source of inflows for Indian market is remittances, which amount to $80 billions. That effectively nullifies their trade deficit. Before 1991. India was a closed economy, highly regulated and protective. After 1991, with liberalization policies, India start growing at amazing pace. I dont know, how much this is sustainable in future, but right now, its in their favor. With huge market and man power, near future looks good for India and it depends upon how their leadership meets the challenges.

true, same with Pakistan considering legal and illegal remmitances (which is easily crossing 30 billion USD) which is covering Pakistan's trade balance.
 
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what about it ?

It says $ inflow has increased compared to previous year and would be more than adequate to finance CAD.

You were questioning the premise of my post which is that India is dependent on foreign inflows for its survival. The excerpt from RBI I shared with you confirms the premise of my post. It also says the volatility of such flows poses a risk for India: "Total capital flows reached a peak of US$ 107 billion in 2007-08 but collapsed to about US$ 7.2 billion in 2008-09 indicating volatile nature of such capital flows."
 
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Haq's Musings: Can Indian Economy Survive Without Western Money?

India runs massive current account deficits. Its imports far outstrip exports year after year. According to the Reserve Bank (RBI) data, in the April-December 2014 period of last fiscal, India's current account deficit stood at $31.1 billion or 2.3% of GDP.




In spite such large recurring deficits, India has built up over $300 billion in foreign exchange reserves. How does it do it? The simple answer is: Foreign money inflows in the form of debt and investments mainly from the West keep the Indian economy afloat.

These inflows have dramatically increased with western support for India in the post Cold War world. Here's how Indian journalist Pankaj Mishra explains the larger western interest driving this phenomenon:

"Seen through the narrow lens of the West’s security and economic interests, the great internal contradictions and tumult within these two large nation-states (India and Pakistan) disappear. In the Western view, the credit-fueled consumerism among the Indian middle class appears a much bigger phenomenon than the extraordinary Maoist uprising in Central India".
Here's how the Asian Development Bank (ADB) describes the rising inflows of foreign, mainly western, capital into India:
"Gross capital flows have increased nearly 22 times from $42.7 billion in 1991-92 to over $932.3 billion in 2010-11. As a share of GDP, this amounted to an increase from 15.5% in 1991-92 to 55.2% in 2010-11. Much of the increase in financial integration occurred between 2003-04 and 2007-08. Given the impressive economic performance indicated by close to 9% growth rate, higher domestic interest rates and a strong currency, India's risk perception was quite low during 2003 to 2007. Furthermore, this period was associated with favorable global conditions in the form of ample liquidity and low interest rates in the global markets—the so-called period of Great Moderation."

Many other economies have been growing faster and producing higher investor returns than India. So the returns do not justify the increased capital flows. Such flows are driven much more by the changing geopolitics of South Asia region and the world since the end of the Cold War in early 1990s. Without these inflows, Indian economy would collapse and India would be at IMF's door seeking last resort loans.

Lesson: Geopolitics drive economy. It's the reason for over a trillion dollars of western capital flow into India since the end of the Cold War. It also explains China's massive $46 billion investment commitment in Pakistan agreed during President Xi Jinping's state visit to Islamabad.

Related Links:

Haq's Musings

India's Soaring Twin Deficits

Xi Jinping's Pakistan Visit

How Strategic Are China-Pakistan Ties?

India Pakistan Economic Comparison in 2014

Pakistan's KSE-100 Outperforms India's Sensex

India's IT Exports Highly Exaggerated

Is India Fudging GDP to Show Faster Growth Than China?

Haq's Musings: Can Indian Economy Survive Without Western Money?
@WebMaster What is your take on hotlinking pages to promote a blog with irrelevant links?
 
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No, it doesn't. That's why Pakistan runs current account deficits. That's why Pakistan has had several BoP crises forcing it to seek IMF's help.

Haq's Musings: Why Blackouts and Bailouts in Energy-Rich Pakistan?

do you know what is the difference between Pak imports and exports, it was 16 billion in 2007 if i remembers, no country can survive with that kind of imbalance for 10 years on mere 6 billion IMF loan that too spread out in 5 years.

State bank figures are 17 billion remittance add hundi in it and what ex-pats spends when they visit Pakistan...thats what is running Pakistan...
 
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You were questioning the premise of my post which is that India is dependent on foreign inflows for its survival. The excerpt from RBI I shared with you confirms the premise of my post. It also says the volatility of such flows poses a risk for India: "Total capital flows reached a peak of US$ 107 billion in 2007-08 but collapsed to about US$ 7.2 billion in 2008-09 indicating volatile nature of such capital flows."
Every developing economy require foreign investment/inflow except North Korea but I only pointed out the contribution of " invisible " in our current account
 
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@WebMaster What is your take on hotlinking pages to promote a blog with irrelevant links?

The OP as I have seen opens Anti India therads with links of a certain blog.

He has done this several times yet not penalized for promoting a blog.
 
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The OP as I have seen opens Anti India therads with links of a certain blog.

He has done this several times yet not penalized for promoting a blog.
Are yaar, uski roji roti hai... bechare ke pet pe kyu martaa hai... uska to baal bacche aur pote haina...
 
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