For the last several months, the South Asian currencies have been under a great deal of stress. The Indian rupee has lost 20 per cent of its value in terms of the American dollar since the beginning of this year. The Pakistani rupee lost close to 14 per cent of its value in the same period. Both governments have taken some steps to steady their currencies. Both have had some success. In both cases, the rupee has pulled back from the lows it reached. But, in focusing on the value of their respective currencies, they have made one big mistake that will prove to be politically costly. They have opted for stabilisation over growth. For this, they have been punished by the markets. The markets will continue to be sceptical for as long as the policymakers don’t change the long-term course they are taking and adopt policies that will take the rate of growth to a higher plane.
The only way to steady the markets, on both sides of the border, is to give a clear signal to them that the policymakers have a well thought out strategy in place to address the longer-term issues the two countries face. Here, India has greater degrees of freedom than those available to Pakistan. To some extent, the policymakers in Islamabad have their hands tied because of the programme they have signed with the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The choice they have to make is between growth and stability. Even though the IMF’s traditional focus on the latter, at the expense of the former, has been softened somewhat by its experience in the late 1990s during the Asian financial crisis, the institution has not significantly departed from its long-held philosophy. Then the countries receiving help from the institution had to drastically reduce public expenditure, curtail domestic demand by raising interest rates and open the economies to foreign trade. The strategy worked but at the expense of a sharp economic contraction, loss of jobs and increase in the incidence of poverty.
The approaches being followed by both India and Pakistan are less drastic but both countries are leaning towards achieving economic stability, even if it means reducing the rate of growth. Both are using the interest rate as an instrument for stabilising the economy. The policymakers fear inflation more than a slowdown in the rate of economic growth but they don’t have the political muscle to rein government expenditure. Not being able to use fiscal policy as a stabiliser, the policymakers are using monetary tools. That is a mistake. They should take some risk with inflation to get growth back on track. That approach will also create greater confidence in the markets and help with the exchange rate.
Growth versus price stabilisation is not a new debate. Nor is the debate about the most effective instrument for increasing the rate of economic growth. Liberal economists have always put growth before stabilisation. It is only with growth that the poorer segments of the population can be helped. There is a virtual consensus among policy analysts that interest rates are the most important tool available to governments for promoting growth. Economists use a formulation, called the Investment-Savings equation (IS curve), to show how interest rates can slow or increase the rate of economic growth. For economies such as those in South Asia, slight interest rate adjustments can produce telling results. With sharp declines in GDP growth in India over the last year and a half, the country needs to lower interests to reignite growth. With Pakistan’s economy stuck in a recession for the last six years, it is also the lowering of the interest rate that should be the policy of choice. In both cases, however, the currency markets have pushed the policymakers in the opposite direction. Sharp declines in the values of the two currencies have persuaded the managers in the two countries to increase interest rates. By doing so, they have stabilised their currencies — perhaps, only temporarily — but they have achieved that result by jeopardising growth.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 7th, 2013.
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COMMENTS (16)
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@David_Smith:
My mistake. I thought I was viewing the PPP figures.
But, I was using same table for comparison, thus the order of magnitude difference between Pakistan and India is the same - India is about 8x times bigger economy.
pakistan has reserves of around 10 billion dollar india around 280 billion dollar....u wanna compare... seriously... pakistan economy has been screwed since 2007...... and the way there;s no bijli there it looks that it will get worse.....poor sharif....its not his fault...
The author has mentioned how the political class has dealt with the crisis in both the countries, what economic choices have they made (Growth vs Inflation) and how it will impact both (India and Pakistan). There is nothing wrong in comparing between the neighbouring countries about the impact.
Whatever the size of the economy wrong decisions by political class will impact the countries.
Good write up Mr. Shahid.
I would like to answer some of the pessimist the author is a world class economist and hence is noting the similarities in the fundamental issues with macro-economic indicator that affect both the economies :I think he mentioned inflation & growth but forgot to mention the CAD and would agree to him that the structural issues are somewhat similar but yet even after such high CAD India has a cushion of high foreign reserves but if I'm not wrong that's not the case with Pak.I would agree and disagree with eminent economist as we(Indians) are going through stagflation continuous inflation and slow growth as author said that he would go for growth rather than reining inflation but that has a danger of creating a asset bubble which we saw leads to several crises like the one that occurred during 2007 economic crises and is currently faced by China but would agree that the approach should be balanced as in India today most of the rise in WPI is due to food inflation that has nothing to do with the interest rates so I think that the reserve bank has been overcautious as far as India is concerned and wouldn't like to comment on his judgment about Pak as I don't much about the macro-economics and central-bank's policy.
Please don't bracket India and pakistan . We are different country with different culture.
@Harkol: The Indian economy is between $1.8 - $2 trillion dollars in real terms, not PPP (the GDP would then be between $4.8 - $5 trillion).
India is not only the Worlds largest Democracy but also the largest Kleptocracy. The way the Politicians who hold unbridled Power have used crony capitalism to loot the country of its natural resources, would put buccaneers and plunderers to shame. In Pakistan the Politicians have no Power to bring any change but the Power to loot is undiminished. India would have been a developed country without the current generation of Politicians and Pakistan would have been developed too, if it did not have to carry the burden of a power hungry Military. Tragic really !
@sh(india):
It isn't entirely wrong to compare the economies.
Indian economy is not 3 times bigger, it is about 8 times bigger! - US$231B vs US$1,842billion (PPP). But, we need to remember Indian population too is 8 times bigger, and thus, there is some parity in per capita.
While a smaller nation has certain advantages/disadvantages a bigger nation doesn't have, in general economic policies tend to provide same results irrespective of size of economy. Singapore is way way too small, but is a strong economy due to focus on growth and enterprise.
On the other hand China is 4 times the size of India, and India can emulate a lot of what China has done.
So, we can learn from what has & hasn't worked in other economies, irrespective of the scale.
First thing never compare a 2 trillion dollar economy with some billion dollar economy..Indian market is totally different...we dont allow black money to get invest in our stock market first of all...secondly,like pakistan..nobody can own a 100% ownership FDI in Indian companies...and India do ask question that even if u have invest 26% the limit of FDI...from where u have got the money.........DOnt know about Indian economy...but pakistan policy paralysis will definitely be solved once the india gets ModiFIED in 2014........let the namo..narendra modi come...all ur policies will automatically takes its path............
@Mohammed Yusuf: Demand for goods will increase and as per Keynes theory when there is more demand the price of these goods will also increase. First of all, Keynes said nothing of the sort. The major fallacy in your comment is that if the cost of capital declines (due to cheaper loans to manufacturers), then the net cost of production will also decline - and thus price to the consumer could also go down in the absence of wage and supply contracts (which is where Keynes disagreed). Thus manufacturers will be able to meet additional demand without raising prices because their cost of production is now lower, resulting in a new equilibrium. However, this does not always happen from reduction of interest rates alone because there needs to be creation of demand of goods and services to generate additional employment and incremental spending power.
Keynes advocated government spending to generate this demand (infrastructure projects - similar to those that most governments have commissioned post 2008-crisis); lower interest rates resulting in increase in inflation until there is capacity or productivity adjustment to fill the gap (new classical economic theory); Mr. Burki possibly assumes that this will reduce short-term unemployment (based on the Phillips curve inverse relationship). However, the Phillips curve stands discredited today; In simple terms, while high inflation results in outflow of capital (for most economies ) here a decline in rupee value will increase the import bill and current account deficit much further - which will in turn has a negative impact on the GDP growth rate (Y = C + I + G + (X-M)). Thus it is not possible to turn a Nelson's eye to inflation and expect growth.
Lower interest means more people will take loans to buy more goods. Demand for goods will increase and as per Keynes theory when there is more demand the price of these goods will also increase. As the price increases, inflation will also increase and the people who have taken the loans will not only struggle to pay their loan instalments, but will also be left with negative equity of their assets. They will be caught in a vicious cycle of debt and servicing their loans. This will give rise to hyper-inflation. I can't believe that this guy was an acting finance minister or whatever. His economics sense is close to zero. No wonder Pakistan's economy is groping in the dark!
The Indian rupee has lost 20 per cent of its value in terms of the American dollar since the beginning of this year. . Amazing spin! How come the author forgot the steep drop in the Indonesian Rupiah and the Brazilian Real along with the Indian Rupee due to the QE taper?
I would completely disagree with the author, just because the issues surrounding India and Pakistan are different.
No where in the world you could compare Indian economy with Pakistan, and this is no way to dishonour the Pakistan. Definitely Indian economy currently faces policy issues and other obstacles for its growth, however the issues are entirely different. The structural differences cannot be only looked from inflation perspective when these two economies are so different. Here the author is asking to lower the interest rate yet he is talking about inflation being main parameter. Clearly economic topics cannot be looked from such wide spectrums. Thanks, Fahim S
Ha, ha, ha.....Pakistanis are so funny! A comparison between India and Pakistan's economy.....do we have anything in common anymore?
Fix your problems, Pakistanis and stop comparing yourself with a society with whom you don't have anything in common now.
never compare india to pakistan. India's economy is three times bigger than pakistan.
Pakistan does not have:
A film industry as big as bollywood. Fortune 500 companies. Car industry as large as india's Exports as much as india's. universities which are featured among the best. India's mba universities have been among the best according to financial times. Good number of expats from different countries.