HomeNewsOpinionTime will tell the extent to which the rupee gets internationalised

Time will tell the extent to which the rupee gets internationalised

Going by the experience of masala bonds, it is worth noting that their issuance has remained a very minor and insignificant fraction of overall external commercial borrowings 

July 13, 2022 / 17:16 IST
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Representative image
Representative image

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI)’s July 11 announcement to allow cross-border trade settlements in Indian rupees comes at a time when the currency is under continuous pressure. The measures follow a series of other steps that have broadly aimed at fortifying India’s external balances, and stabilise the weakening currency.

Apart from a strengthening US Dollar, the country-specific sources of exchange market pressure include a widening trade deficit driven by costlier imports of energy (oil and coal) and gold, slowing export growth, and net outflow of portfolio capital for several months. So, it elicits some wryness when the RBI says the rupee settlement mechanism endeavours to facilitate export growth, and global trade as well as ‘support the increasing interest of global trading community in INR’.

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Irony apart, the rupee settlement of international trade does represent a step towards currency internationalisation, just as the ‘masala’ or rupee-denominated bonds launched in 2015-16 were. In the new domestic currency trade framework, exports and imports can be denominated and invoiced in rupees at a market-determined exchange rate, through special rupee (Vostro) accounts, while any surpluses after offset are permitted to pay for projects and investments in government securities.

Time will tell the extent to which the rupee gets internationalised as a result of this move. Going by the experience of masala bonds, it is worth noting that their issuance has remained a very minor and insignificant fraction of overall external commercial borrowings; it gathers momentum at times of currency appreciation (e.g., 2016-17) and falls back in the converse situation. Masala bonds have neither promoted or popularised the rupee’s global usage, nor matched up to expectations of a meaningful hedge against currency risk, or the emergence of an offshore rupee yield curve.