Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Subbarao optimistic on India’s return to high growth
From The Hindu
Duvvuri Subbarao, Governor of the Reserve Bank of India, struck an optimistic note on India’s growth path through the recent financial crisis and its prospects for the future.
Speaking at the Peterson Institute here on Monday following his attendance of the Spring Meetings of the International Monetary Fund-World Bank over the weekend, Mr. Subbarao said, “The growth drivers that powered India’s high growth in the years before the crisis are all intact.”
He added that the challenge for the government and the Reserve Bank of India was to move forward with reforms to steer the economy to a higher growth path that was sustainable and equitable.
Mr. Subbarao touched upon five key policy areas during his speech — capital flows, exchange rate management, inflation targeting, the harmonising of monetary and fiscal policies, and necessary improvements in India’s monetary policy transmission.
Arguing that India clocked an average growth rate of 9 per cent in the five years prior to 2007–08, he said that growth momentum had indeed been interrupted by the financial crisis, “more than we had originally thought but less than it did most other countries”.
He said that despite growth falling below 6 per cent for one quarter, the growth for the full year 2008–09 was “a resilient 6.7 per cent… [and] current estimates are that the economy had grown between 7.2 and 7.5 per cent for the just ended fiscal year 2009–10 and that growth for 2010–11 will be +8 percent”.
On capital flows, Mr. Subbarao said, “India’s approach to managing capital flows too has been pragmatic, transparent, and contestable. We prefer long-term flows to short-term flows and non-debt flows to debt flows.”
He corroborated this policy stance with evidence from the aftermath of the financial crisis: “The recent crisis saw, across emerging economies, a rough correlation between the extent of openness of the capital account and the extent of adverse impact of the crisis. Surely, this should not be read as a denouncement of open capital account, but a powerful demonstration of the tenet that premature opening hurts more than it helps.”
Mr. Subbarao added that it was notable that the IMF published a policy note in February 2010 that reversed its long-held orthodoxy and admitted there could be certain “circumstances in which capital controls can be a legitimate component of the policy response to surges in capital flows”.
Regarding exchange rate management, Mr. Subbarao clarified that the RBI intervened in the market only to smooth volatility that is harmful to trade and investment. He said the “abrupt” reversal of capital flows in the crisis year 2008–09 — in marked contrast to prior years — however showed that India did in fact have a flexible exchange rate, and “also evidences the increasing flexibility of the rate over time in relation to the magnitude of flows”.
On inflation targeting, Mr. Subbarao claimed that the RBI would never be a pure inflation targeter given the larger developmental context in India. He further said, “Price stability does not necessarily ensure financial stability.”
However, he noted that with regard to harmonising fiscal and monetary policies, both the government and the RBI had begun the process of exit from the expansionary stances of the crisis period. “The government has programmed a reduction in the gross fiscal deficit from 6.8 percent of GDP in fiscal year 2009–10 to 5.5 percent of GDP in 2010–11,” he explained.
On India’s monetary transmission mechanism, the process by which the central bank's policy signals influence the financial markets, Mr. Subbarao said in India it “has been improving but is yet to fully mature”. However. he said that improving monetary transmission was important if the RBI’s efforts at promoting growth with price stability were to be effective.
Labels: economic policy, Indian economy, inflation, RBI Governor
Tuesday, March 02, 2010
How often you gonna have lunch with the President?

From The Hindu
He’s got a unified opposition party trying to scupper his most ambitious policy. He’s being criticised for not being quick to fix an economic crisis he didn’t create. He’s feeling the heat for American soldiers dying in a war in a distant land; and bringing them back could lead to something worse. Give the man a break – or even better, get him some deep fried chicken wings.
President Obama today took some time out of his permanently hectic schedule to sample some the local cuisine and hospitality at Savannah, Georgia. On a trip to the Deep South today to announce his administration’s latest green initiative, the HOMESTAR programme, Mr. Obama paid a visit to the famous Mrs. Wilkes’ Boarding House Restaurant and lunched with some of the regulars there.
In a clear indication of the excitement that the impromptu Presidential visit generated, a sign outside the restaurant read, “Sorry we are full right now, please form a line and we will seat you” and hoots of excitement and applause could be heard as he was entering.
“Something smells good up here,” the President declared, doubtless anticipating that he’d be offered some chicken wings soon.
While the regulars at his tables offered to not ask him questions so he could focus on eating, Mr. Obama replied, "How often you gonna have lunch with the President? Might as well ask some questions".
In the lunch-table conversation that ensued Mr. Obama said, “I think we’ve come through probably one of the toughest years we’ve had since the 30’s, objectively speaking”.
He added, however, that he thought that the country was now at a stage where it was “out of the worst part of it”. The main task at hand was to make institutions responsive to new challenges as opposed to putting that off, he said.
“And that’s hard to do,” Mr. Obama said. “We’re like folks who have had a long party… then there is a little bit of a hangover and you have to… clean up and nobody wants to“.
Towards the end of the meal, in a candid moment, the President said, “One of things about being President is, you’re always in this boat, everywhere you go you’re always cramped a little bit. So having the chance to get out, go to a restaurant, sit down with some people – it is a great treat”.
And he couldn’t get his mind off the chicken wings. Even until the end of the lunch he could be heard muttering, “I’ll take a drum stick. If there was a wing I would have taken a wing. Let me just have one now, I don’t want to get carried away”.
President Obama today took some time out of his permanently hectic schedule to sample some the local cuisine and hospitality at Savannah, Georgia. On a trip to the Deep South today to announce his administration’s latest green initiative, the HOMESTAR programme, Mr. Obama paid a visit to the famous Mrs. Wilkes’ Boarding House Restaurant and lunched with some of the regulars there.
In a clear indication of the excitement that the impromptu Presidential visit generated, a sign outside the restaurant read, “Sorry we are full right now, please form a line and we will seat you” and hoots of excitement and applause could be heard as he was entering.
“Something smells good up here,” the President declared, doubtless anticipating that he’d be offered some chicken wings soon.
While the regulars at his tables offered to not ask him questions so he could focus on eating, Mr. Obama replied, "How often you gonna have lunch with the President? Might as well ask some questions".
In the lunch-table conversation that ensued Mr. Obama said, “I think we’ve come through probably one of the toughest years we’ve had since the 30’s, objectively speaking”.
He added, however, that he thought that the country was now at a stage where it was “out of the worst part of it”. The main task at hand was to make institutions responsive to new challenges as opposed to putting that off, he said.
“And that’s hard to do,” Mr. Obama said. “We’re like folks who have had a long party… then there is a little bit of a hangover and you have to… clean up and nobody wants to“.
Towards the end of the meal, in a candid moment, the President said, “One of things about being President is, you’re always in this boat, everywhere you go you’re always cramped a little bit. So having the chance to get out, go to a restaurant, sit down with some people – it is a great treat”.
And he couldn’t get his mind off the chicken wings. Even until the end of the lunch he could be heard muttering, “I’ll take a drum stick. If there was a wing I would have taken a wing. Let me just have one now, I don’t want to get carried away”.
Labels: economic policy, environment, Obama
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