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Convertibility needs to precede the internationalisation of the rupee

There are other important prerequisites for achieving internationalisation — the existence of deep and well-functioning domestic financial markets, a trusted legal framework for contract enforcement, low inflation, and stable and predictable macroeconomic policies

July 07, 2023 / 15:09 IST
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The inclusion of the rupee in the International Monetary Fund’s special drawing rights basket has been recommended.

The Reserve Bank of India’s task force report on internationalising the rupee released recently defines a currency as internationalised when market participants (both residents and non-residents) “conveniently use it to trade, invest, borrow and invoice in it”. It has understandably taken a graded approach recommending short-term and medium-term measures for accelerating internationalisation.

Among the short-term suggestions are those relating to allowing non-residents to hold rupee accounts, integrating Indian payment systems (like the Unified Payments Interface) with other countries for cross-border transactions, the inclusion of government securities (G-Secs) in global bond indices and a few others. The medium-term recommendations relate mostly to taxation and settlement systems and permitting banking services in rupees outside India through offshore branches of banks. In the long run, it also recommends efforts for the inclusion of the rupee in the International Monetary Fund’s special drawing rights basket.

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Changing Stand

But what is interesting are its views on internationalisation which it describes as a “continuous process involving progressive capital account convertibility, wherein the domestic currency increasingly acquires the character of a de facto freely convertible currency”. This is in striking contrast to an earlier RBI task force report of 2019 on a different but allied subject (Offshore Rupee markets) where the committee was of the firm opinion that capital controls were essential for India to avoid the impossible trinity problem.