Why not have a different approach to strengthen the rupee?
The continued depreciation of the Indian Rupee raises an important and fundamental question. Can the currency of a nation possessing one of the world’s largest economies, massive gold holdings, huge foreign exchange reserves, vast natural and human resources, and one of the largest domestic markets continue to weaken indefinitely without serious concern and corrective policy action?
India is not a resource-poor country. Nor is it a weak economy lacking productive capacity or internal demand. The country possesses enormous economic resilience backed by:
Estimated privately held gold reserves of nearly 35,000 tonnes,
Large official foreign exchange reserves at around $690 billion
A vast and expanding domestic market,
Unlimited scope for expanding Tourism, Health sector, Higher Education and related infrastructure.
Strong agricultural, industrial and service sectors,
One of the world’s largest and youngest workforces,
Significant overseas Indian savings and investments,
Growing technological and entrepreneurial capabilities.
Large presence of NRIs around the world and OCIs waiting for avenues and opportunities to be part and parcel of the Economy's fast growth dreaming its march towards the most advanced economy by 2047.
In such circumstances, persistent weakening of the rupee should not be viewed merely as a routine market phenomenon but as an issue requiring deeper policy intention and attention along with strategic economic management.
Gold Cannot Remain Economically Idle
India continues to import large quantities of gold by spending valuable foreign exchange, while simultaneously holding massive quantities of privately owned gold lying economically idle.
If gold cannot support the nation during periods of exchange-rate pressure, imported inflation and external uncertainty, the entire approach towards gold management requires serious rethinking.
The time has perhaps come to revisit the concept of a National Gold Policy with the objective of converting part of the country’s dormant gold wealth into productive financial strength.
A properly structured Gold Bank or strengthened Gold Monetisation framework can:
Increase confidence in the rupee,
Supplement foreign exchange stability mechanisms,
Reduce pressure on external borrowing,
Moderate imported inflation,
Improve financial resilience during global instability.
Incentivise earnings, inward remittances,and their retentions, and generation of wealth with built in awards and rewards.
Gold-backed financial instruments and sovereign guarantees can transform idle household assets into productive national strength without undermining public ownership.
Exchange Rate Stability is an Economic Necessity
A continuously depreciating currency affects every sector of the economy. It raises import costs, fuels inflation, increases business uncertainty and weakens purchasing power. While moderate exchange-rate flexibility may be necessary in a market economy, excessive and prolonged depreciation of the rupee can adversely affect economic confidence and long-term stability.
India therefore requires a more determined and strategic exchange-rate management approach based on:
Strong reserve management,
Better control over speculative flows,
Productive deployment of national resources,
Reduction in avoidable imports,
Encouragement of stable long-term capital inflows,
Forex Stabilisation Fund backed by Gold and dynamic need based policy approach .
The objective should not be artificial appreciation of the rupee, but prevention of disorderly and avoidable weakening inconsistent with the country’s economic fundamentals.
Mobilising NRI Foreign Exchange Resources
India’s overseas citizens represent an enormous source of economic strength and foreign exchange stability.
Many NRIs and OCI holders possess substantial foreign currency savings abroad. Special incentivised investment channels with exchange-rate protection, sovereign backing and attractive long-term returns can encourage larger inflows into productive sectors of the economy.
Such schemes can support:
Infrastructure financing,
Manufacturing growth,
Technology development,
Long-term capital formation,
Strengthening of foreign exchange reserves,
Vast expansion of agriculture, augmenting cash crops, vegetables and fruits, and related export related industries.
Confidence, transparency and policy stability are essential for attracting these resources.
Curbing Speculative and Illicit Forex Outflows
Persistent leakages through hawala transactions, round-tripping of funds even perhaps under Liberalised remittance scheme, under-invoicing and over-invoicing of trade, and misuse of remittance channels weaken the integrity of the financial system and place unnecessary pressure on the rupee. Proper recognition of Economic Patriotism and acute Business Acumen with Ethics can work wonders in bringing about the desired change in Foreign Exchange area.
Strong enforcement supported by technology, artificial intelligence, data analytics and coordinated regulatory oversight is essential to minimise such distortions.
Economic patriotism and financial discipline are as important as monetary policy in preserving currency stability.
Need for a Stronger Exchange Rate Stabilisation Mechanism
India may also revisit and strengthen the concept of an Exchange Rate Stabilisation Fund backed by sound reserve management and supported, where appropriate, by gold-linked instruments and long-term sovereign financial planning.
The rupee must reflect not merely short-term speculative market behaviour but the real strength, resilience and long-term potential of the Indian economy.
Conclusion
Loka Samastha Sukhino Bhavanthu.
TVG Krishnan
(personal Views )