News Business 'Allowing foreign investment in stock markets helped economy'

'Allowing foreign investment in stock markets helped economy'

New Delhi: India has benefited greatly from the ease with which foreign investors can invest in its stock markets, says Cornell University economist Eswar Prasad.  “This presents a stark contrast with China, where equity investment

allowing foreign investment in stock markets helped economy allowing foreign investment in stock markets helped economy
New Delhi: India has benefited greatly from the ease with which foreign investors can invest in its stock markets, says Cornell University economist Eswar Prasad.  “This presents a stark contrast with China, where equity investment by investors from other countries is heavily restricted,” he writes in his new book “The Dollar Trap: How the US Dollar Tightened Its Grip on Global Finance”.  

Prasad says foreign inflows have helped deepen and increase liquidity in India's stock markets.  “Inflows have provided a useful source of financing for Indian corporations that no longer have to rely just on the domestic banking system, which has limited capacity to fund the country's mega corporations,” he writes in the book, published by Penguin.

According to Prasad, for all their benefits, however, foreign equity inflows have also added to the volatility of India's stock markets and to currency volatility.  “The saving grace is that foreign investors bear both the currency and return risks on their stock investments, so the burden of this volatility does not fall solely on Indian residents.”

Policymakers in emerging markets, Prasad says, have developed a strong aversion to relying on the IMF's largesse in their times of distress and have instead turned to self-insurance.

“The humiliation of going to the IMF when India's foreign currency reserves had run down to just one billion dollar is seared in the minds of Indian officialdom to this day...  Whatever the merits of this adjustment, the fact that the IMF had India by the throat and could extract a steep price in exchange for a loan stuck in the craw of Indian officials and has influenced their behaviour since then,” he says.  

Prasad, also a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution, feels that though India has a high private savings rate and needs a high investment rate to grow but undisciplined government spending has created large budget deficits that in turn contribute to large current account deficits.

“Thus, when capital inflows dry up, India either has to cut its consumption and investment or must eat into its international reserves. Neither of these is an attractive option,” he says.

According to the author, bringing down government deficits and debt to manageable levels and tackling other problems that breed large current account deficits can help make emerging markets more resilient to the volatility of capital flows.

On BRICS leaders' decision to set up a Contingent Reserve Arrangement, Prasad says the size of the grouping's individual reserve holdings could make a pool of their reserves into a big enough bazooka to scare of speculators trying to drive down a particular currency's value.

“However, countries in the group do not necessarily have common economic and political interests. For instance, India and China have a long history of border disputes. Indian would be loath to depend on Chinese largesse in the event it needed a huge infusion of reserves for fear that China would use it as leverage in their territorial disputes,” he writes.  “The Dollar Trap” offers a panoramic analysis of the fragile state of global finance and makes a compelling case that, despite all its flaws, the dollar will remain the ultimate safe-haven currency.

Prasad examines how the dollar came to have a central role in the world economy and demonstrates that it will remain the cornerstone of global finance for the foreseeable future.  Marshalling a range of arguments and data, and drawing on the latest research, he tries to prove why it will be difficult to dislodge the dollar-centric system.

The author discuses key contemporary issues in international finance, including the growing economic influence of emerging markets, the currency wars, the complexities of the China-US relationship, and the role of institutions like the International Monetary Fund and offers new ideas for fixing the flawed monetary system.




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