Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Not completely detached...


Article;
Monetary-policy review why RBI kept rates unchanged despite high inflation.

Comment;
We are completely surprised by the RBI moves but nevertheless he has maintained that the chances of a rate hike in next policy review can not be ruled out given high food and fuel inflation. There are two components of the food category which has made him postpone a rate hike… one is prices of vegetables and two, price of cereals, especially, wheat and rice. I think he considered price of vegetables while deciding a pause which showed a decline in recent days which again i think is the reason behind the rate hike pause which probably made him believe that inflation is on decline, moreover, the government showed its commitment to reduce fiscal deficit and remove supply-side bottlenecks by releasing more cereals to market. High fiscal deficit and supply side problems were the major issues everybody was lecturing government on… Every body was almost agreed that the problem of inflation was due to supply-side and higher rural wages made the task of lowering inflation a little more cumbersome. Moreover, a good monsoon this year makes the inflation-story more of twist and turns because it will increase demand within the rural economy and will put further pressure on the prices in the future. Therefore, we should definitely not think that we have bottomed out. Our RBI governor has overlooked the US tapering position which could be another turning point before the economy turns-out. I think our Governor has not completely detached himself form the government…

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

The level of interest rates...


Article;
How a 50-bps plus rate hike by RBI will add to debt-load of BSE-500-firms.

Comment;
What decides the level of interest rate is also important... It is the level of unemployment and inflation that are responsible for it because the central bank manages interest rate to affect these two variables. In INDIA's case it is inflation and little unemployment. Inflation exerts an upward pressure on the interest rates and unemployment downward...  So during high inflation regime like in INDIA we expect interest rate to rise but we do not have updated data on unemployment which also have an effect on the interest rates. More mathematically if the inflation-target in INDIA in 5% and the actual inflation is 10% we need to increase interest rate by 500 basis points according to Taylor’s Rule. Therefore, if the current repo-rate is 8% then the central bank should increase the repo rate to 13 %. When the central bank increases interest rate it indirectly restricts income and demand and consequently prices… Moreover when interest rate is hiked it affects savings of all, poor and rich alike, capitalist and the public, consumers and producers… So consumers have majority. Producers’ majority would demand lower interest rate and consumers higher interest rate for their savings. Producers are also consumers…Therefore, the (RBI) Governor should decide in favor of majority and a falling rate of growth of deposits due to negative real interest rates (nominal interest rates minus inflation)…

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Domestic value of currency should develop...


Article;
Rudi Dornbusch and the salvation of international macroeconomics.

Comment;
In the foreign exchange market an increase in income of the consumer through depreciation must be weighted against the fall in the purchasing power of the currency, in a sense, debasing which means a country can not endlessly depreciate. Changes in the value of a currency do not affect prices they affect income of the consumer through depreciation so there is no question of prices. Nevertheless, in the next period we can expect prices to rise due to increase in demand. However, we are overshooting the value of currency and not the prices so in the short-run it is sticky. We have sign of persistent deflation or at least a pressure in many parts of the WORLD like Japan, US, and even in Germany which went through internal devaluation which means a downward pressure on prices and wages. Therefore certainly there is a question regarding the right policy… internal devaluation like Germany or internal revaluation like the US… Therefore apart from foreign exchange market we do not have evidences for price-stickiness. I would support Germany because of my belief that the value of a currency should rise domestically also and not only in terms of another currency. Prices should fall in the long-run and not rise as normally happens. The value of a currency or a dollar or pound should rise domestically if we claim to develop in the long run. The value of currency should also develop…

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Bubbles, yes and no...


Article;
Cheap money party over analysts warn as fears rise of asset-bubbles.

Comment;
Bubbles in the developed countries... no, because inflation is too low. What a bubble when it did not stoke inflation? A bubble is created when there is a divergence between real prices and nominal prices. In this scene if nominal prices do not rise that means a rise in real prices of assets (investment) and income... its healthy sign that the economy is picking up it will create demand and will create inflation. But, if people expect a deflation they would post-pone their spending. Japan’s experience may reinforce the people’s expectation of a price-fall. But, the central banks are trying to replace that expectation with a price-rise expectation by engaging in loose monetary polices and inflation targeting. But, as long as inflation remains stagnant it means demand has not outpaced supply… general price-level rise when demand exceeds supply. The best way to increase demand and inflation is to increase income. This means we have to wait for recovery, until, incomes go up... But, incomes rise slowly during recession… the process of recovery will be slow… If we can directly increase incomes it will hasten the recovery. Therefore, as far, income and inflation remains low we can not expect a bubble in the developed world. Nevertheless, the expectation of a bubble in the emerging world is not a far possibility. The flood of liquidity by the developed countries’ central banks has stoked inflation in the emerging market and may have a created bubble. Especially, INDIA and China, and, our WORLD is much more connected now… 

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Indian-Economy Issues and Challenges...






Our objective is price stability with full-employment. Because when there is full employment there is no one dependent on the State, means a zero fiscal deficit, which actually will necessitate no further taxes. The economy will be in equilibrium... But our main problem is “non-accelerating-inflation-rate of unemployment”, NAIRU. It is different for different countries. It is calculated by research. But we think in a large country like INDIA it must be around 4-6%. But our current unemployment rate is 3% which is out of our range (4-6%) in which inflation becomes low and stable. It is in a range which has put pressure on prices to go up, an upward bias... Income is rising faster than employment. The market is competing for labor and the RBI has put brakes on the interest rate which has also put brakes on higher wages and income (indirectly). The RBI is trying to avoid a wage-price spiral but in the long-run wages and income will go up in real terms because we are trying to converge our per capita income to the developed countries' figures. Wages and income rise in real terms also when prices fall. As long as the RBI can not tolerate higher wages and income it can concentrate to look at the real side of the issue, lower prices and higher real wages and incomes. But inflation (WPI) is again inching above to hurt real wages/income. We think in the short run the RBI can choose to keep the value of money, and therefore, wages/income intact by choosing higher interest rates (months)...

Indian economy is not demand constrained, it is supply constrained. There is absolutely no doubt about the growth potential... the doubt is about when... when we would be able to reduce the interest rates... And, that will happen when inflation comes down to our target (5%)... The government should aim at removing supply side bottle necks and the RBI should take care of the finances by reducing interest rates... The stock market in INDIA is very responsive, it is responding on all the relevant information. It is active... We in INDIA have subdued the demand pressure by not reducing interest rates... Industry is waiting for rate-cuts so that they can resume (investment) spending... But after the last two rate hikes the Industry is worried about another such action from the RBI considering high inflation (food and fuel)… It is also expected because lower prices is a relief for all, especially food and fuel  prices, and when we lower prices by increasing interest rates it is also good for investment… our savings and yield on savings increase… we become richer… Therefore, it is in the interest of the economy to lower prices by increasing interest rates…  An inflation rate of (above) 10% is enough for invoking monetary policy action… We in INDIA are over-employed we are working longer hours and are paid less than our developed country counterparts. “INDIA IS OVER-EMPLOYED” not only unemployed. Unemployment is not a major problem in INDIA, therefore, we need to look at inflation, and, real wages and income…

We, in INDIA are advised to impart skills and traning to our work-force which is expected to increase productivity and wages. Higher productivity means higher wages which also indirectly means we are, now so far, under-paid and we are doing jobs longer. Use of skills make any task easier and it takes less time therefore we need to match skills with jobs. Without which any task would be a little difficult or harder. We have to work a little harder and longer. We are paid according to the marginal product which would be less if we are employed elsewhere, wrong skills and job match. In this sense we are over-employed because we are getting less and working same hours as the right jobs and skill match. We are over-employed because we are being paid less. Nevertheless the problem of over-employment co-exist with unemployment in INDIA because we are growing slower and are adding less jobs every quarter because of, again, high inflation and interest rates which has put a hold on investment. Our real wages are low also because of high inflation. We need to improve real wages if we want to correct the “tag” over-employment because it restricts the economy’s demand and consumption which is directly responsible for the level of employment and growth. Our RBI Governor is giving more importance to inflation over unemployment which also depends on the same (inflation). If inflation goes down interest rates will go down, and, real-wages, investment, employment and growth will pick-up. A low level of inflation is also necessary for a high level of employment or low level of unemployment…

 Before the RBI the question is not just inflation… it is actually a trade-off between inflation and unemployment. If inflation is high the central bank chooses a lower level of employment by raising interest rate. On the other hand, if unemployment is high it chooses a higher level of inflation by lowering interest rate. To sum up, a central banks’ job is not just keeping check on inflation but to ensure full employment, as well. Just to note, full employment is established before 100% employment, at 95% employment or 5% frictional unemployment.

Unemployment…   
We generally talk about real interest rates and indirectly about the cost of capital. But totally ignore the labor and its cost (wages), the real impediment to growth. The level of unemployment is a real constraint, about which we are lacking updated data (INDIA). Investment increase up to the point of full employment and after that wages keep on increasing because the market then competes for labor because, again, after that labor becomes scarce. After, again, full employment only wages and income increase... Both real and nominal interest rates decrease before full-employment and after that the gap between real and nominal interest rate starts increasing because production can not be increased because of full-employment (labor is fully employed) and to control inflation we need to increase interest rates ... Both labor and capital are means of production but labor is more scarce than capital. Actually capital is not scarce, at all (read Keynes General Theory). The credit growth in INDIA is 16% and the deposit growth rate is around 12% which means demand for funds is higher than the supply, and, when demand is higher we need to increase supply by offering high interest rate to depositors; Inflation is eating into the savings, people are saving less, now. We need to offer higher interest on savings so that people consume less and save more to maintain the supply and demand balance…   

 We read at many places that in 2012 unemployment rate fell to 3.8%. We should be surprised that how with a high interest rate, around 8%, and with everybody keeping their hands-off of investment unemployment rate fell to 3.8%? If it has and is true… it is a sign of overheating of the economy and, now, we do not wonder, anymore, why inflation is so persistent.
 
India's real GDP at 5% is good, not very low, when rich countries are doing at 2%. China is growing a little better at 7%, exports are an advantage. Their nominal GDP must be much higher... To be more exact, INDIA’s nominal GDP growth rate is equal to real GDP plus inflation means, 5% + 10% (inflation, CPI) = 15% which is not sustainable because inflation is too high, income, consumption, and saving/investment is lagging behind. It is so high that no bank is giving 15% interest on savings a year. Banks are increasing income 9% a year. However, public and private spending is rising under compulsion under price-rise… In the long run when inflation is assumed zero, real GDP growth rate will equal nominal GDP growth rate in equilibrium. The long run potential GDP growth rate of the Indian-Economy is 12% because its population growth rate is 17% (every ten year), and, deducting frictional unemployment of 5% it comes to 12%, the rate of growth of labor force and employment to maintain full employment. Therefore India's full-employment long-run potential growth rate is 12%. And, under equilibrium, full-employment long run potential GDP growth rate (12%) = nominal GDP growth rate (12%) = real GDP growth rate (12%). But, the situation is 12% = 15% = 5%.

The last one, the real GDP growth rate is a long run goal. In the short run we have achieved the target with nominal GDP growth rate at 15%. Indian economy is at full employment with all the supply side constraints. In 2012 the unemployment rate for Indian-Economy fell to 3.8% which is why inflation is so high and persistent. We can not achieve 12% real GDP because we can not tolerate inflation above 10%. The benchmark we have set for our selves. We need patience. No doubt inflation is the major problem…

Fiscal-deficit and Subsidies…

For the past 2-3 years we are in the realm of high fiscal deficit and high inflation. However, it (the fiscal-deficit) fell to 5.2% from that initial target of 5.3% in the budget 2012 and in 2014 it is expected to fall to 4.8% of GDP. A simple rule of economics is that whenever money supply increases, either by government or by the central bank, it stokes inflation… Moreover, we are continuously discussing that fiscal deficit as high and the government, too, is planning to bring it to a sustainable level. Both the govrenment and RBI can affect demand... The government through loose fiscal policy in programmes like MNREGA… it is pumping wages and income... Rural areas got a boost in the same terms (wages and income) and demand is built…
Fiscal deficits are inflationary because government spending is increased but subsidies on essential products like fuel are there to contain price rise and inflationary effects since transport cost is a major determinant of prices of goods in an economy. A paper by Paul Krugman “Increasing Returns and Economic Geography” for which he has been awarded Nobel-Prize, too, says that transport costs play a major role in the overall price structure of an economy. Therefore, from the point of view of inflation subsides are good because they keep expenditure on transport divided between government and the economy (consumers and producers). If the government had not shared the prices of fuels then the whole price for fuel must be paid by the economy, consumers and producers, both. To sum-up, Fuel-subsidies are anti- inflationary, but, they increase government expenditure and sometimes revenues are short but the impact of rise in fuel prices is felt by all. The government either has to prop-up production of fuel, which in the short-run not possible or it can help reducing the pressure on prices paid by the economy.

Subsidized fertilizer means subsidized food grains. The question arises “why the government supported the food grain prices till now and why, now, it wants to discontinue this practice?” There can be two possible answers, one, the government wanted to rein in inflation and inflationary expectations, and, the second one is, that, it wanted to support the farmers, anyways. If the government wanted to lower inflation then why, now, it wants to leave the economy in doldrums when inflation is already high and is not coming down. This is not the right time to discontinue subsidies. And, if it (the government) wanted to support the farmers, then, why, now, it feels it appropriate to leave them to the market, the argument given in favor of FDI in multi brand retail, when it has not arrived yet. Subsidies distort the price structure the market offers. Till now the government provided subsidies and bought the most of food grains itself. It never intended the market to support the farmers which could offer them higher prices and also the capacity to pay for fertilizer, themselves. It has literally exploited the farmers so far and now it will push the whole economy back to high inflation. The proposition that government now wants to discontinue subsidies due to high fiscal deficit is acceptable, but, is the food grain market in INDIA, now, sufficient to factor in the cost of fertilizer and pay for it without increasing the prices of food grain and overall inflation? It is not possible. Let us wait for the FDI in multi-brand-retail, if it happens, amid all the discussion…

In the recent years the government has decided to curb fiscal-deficit to bring inflation down which rattled high due to fiscal profligacy during recession, 2008 onwards. The Economy’s demand needed to be restricted because people are getting more and are spending more. Investment needs to be recycled to the good and services market through savings. But since now we are spending more we have less to save. Interest rates by banks are not enough to attract depositor and moreover it is unable to spark investors due to higher interest rates. The demand is coming from the bottom of the pyramid due to employment creation in the economy. The chain breaks where high interest rates keep a tab on investment. The main problem is employment creation and little inflation motivates the market. Public employment creation is crowding-out private investment and employment creation. We have to decide which one, private or public, employment creates reasonable inflation levels.

Monetary-Policy…

The RBI's credibility depends upon his actions. Price stability and full employment are two macro-economic objectives of monetary and fiscal policies. The economy on the employment front is doing fine but we need price stability to check inflationary expectations to limit the demand for increase in income and wages economy-wide to avoid the cost-push -inflation.

If China can grow 8% amid all the crises in the trading regions like the US and Europe India too can achieve 7-7.5% if it goes for domestic demand. China’s dependency on exports for growth is well known and is also advised to concentrate on domestic demand. In India the Reserve Bank of India has subdued the demand for investment by not lowering the key interest rates. And the day repo-rates will go down investment, economic activity and growth rates will pick-up. We can easily expect the growth rate for Indian- Economy at 7.5-8% if inflation and repo-rates come down. We can easily remember how fast the growth picked up back in 2008 when the economy received high doses of fiscal and monetary stimuli due to sub-prime crisis in the US. We do not think we need to worry too much about growth.

Many disagree that the main gauge of inflation is WPI, and, it is neither CPI nor core-inflation (manufactured products). If we (the authors) had to choose an indicator of inflation we would go for food-and-fuel-inflation because the argument is that we need to protect the value of money poor people are getting because their income/wages are more or less indefinite, and, depends upon a variety of factors like season and availability of work. Poor people do not consume all the products WPI, CPI and core-inflation take into account, ninety percent of their consumption basket includes food-and-fuel.

We, especially the RBI,consider WPI as a gauge of inflation but other countries like the US and the European countries use CPI as better indicator of inflation which if we consider is above 10%, in INDIA. An inflation rate of 10% is enough for a policy response. But since INDIA is supply constrained we have accepted it as normal. As far as growth rate is concerned which dipped to 5% in the last fiscal the RBI needs to reduce repo-rate by at least 150 basis points to push back the economy to 8%, according to the Taylor-Rule. Of the 150 basis point the RBI has reduced repo-rate by 100 basis points so far which can catapult the economy to around 7% growth rate. But to achieve 8% growth rate the RBI needs to reduce repo-rate by another 50 basis points and to achieve 9% it has to reduce repo-rate by another 50 basis points. But this can not be done due to, again, supply side constraints. Just to note, the RBI reduced the repo-rate by 300 basis points from around 8% to 5% to avert recession in 2008 which pushed the inflation rate from 10% to 20% and growth rate from 6% to 10%. For INDIA growth is not a problem but the supply side bottlenecks are. We disagree that growth in INDIA will not evoke inflation because so far it has...

To be precise, the RBI, for every extra percentage of inflation, should increase interest rate by more than one percent. Therefore, if the RBI inflation-target is 5% and we have inflation rate of 10% we, at least, need to increase interest rate by 500 basis points. This is not unimaginable… Way back during 1970s, in the US, the Fed’s head Paul Volcker raised interest rate from 11% to 21%... But the unemployment rate rose to 10%. We are not sure way back, then, in the US had the kind of unemployment-benefits it has, now. These benefits show our tolerance towards unemployment… Unluckily INDIA has no such mechanism that decides our tolerance towards unemployment and, but, luckily unemployment is not a big problem. It is near 6% (as per our FM), manageable. Therefore unlike the US, in the absence of any unemployment benefits, INDIA can tolerate less unemployment to let the prices cool down. I’m not expecting a knee-jerk reaction but during a slowdown when the source of income dries-up a lower inflation is like an ointment… we can easily expect the RBI to raise interest rates some more. Capitalists will be benefited by the action and the lay man’s relief due to lower prices.

Moreover there has been a gap between our savings growth rate and the lending growth rate, and, people are more eager to invest in physical assets like land and gold. This can be attributed to the negative real interest rates (nominal interest rates minus inflation) on savings. To close the gap between savings growth rate and lending growth rate we need to make saving a little more attractive so that it could catch-up the lending growth rate and exert less-pressure on interest rate to increase…

Food-Security-Bill and Cash-Transfer-Scheme (CTS)…

Growth is contingent on the Food Security Bill because food and fuel inflation is still around 10% and is hovering around that level since 2004. Very sticky. Fuel prices depend on international factors such as dollar prices and external demand over which we have little control. But food prices are largely determined by internal demand, which is high due to fiscal expenditure, and due to internal supply conditions. I agree weather conditions were not conducive last year (2012) but the government has enough food grains in its coffers. And, definitely it can contribute in reducing inflation and inflationary expectations. The government is treading so slow...

We in no way are opposing cash-transfer-scheme (CTS) but the ground realities tell a different story; a cash strapped government and a lonely central bank fighting with inflation… It is like telling people about something we can not deliver, right now, but the government looks in haste. Cash transfer schemes have been successful in other countries (like Brazil) to make a dent on poverty which India can replicate, but, with a pause, till the supply side is good enough to take the shock demand presents. We are sure such a scheme would necessitate a little inflation and we have to choose we want it right now or with a time-lag. If we go for former we will have to chose an inflation target of 10% or more, but, if we go for latter we will have to wait for some time to let the inflation cool-down and chose an inflation of 6-7%.
No political party can dare to oppose a scheme which covers a large population but they should endorse their own versions/variants of the Food-Security-Bill and the CTS...

Current-Account-Deficit (CAD)…
 
Every country needs foreign currency to pay for its imports, and, reduce the gap between exports and imports, called the CAD (Current-Account-Deficit).  The CAD in INDIA has touched an all time high of 4.8% of GDP in 2013 on the back of high gold imports but our policy-makers were committed to bring it down and by using import-tariff on gold which reduced our imports of gold and we are now expecting the CAD to come down below 3% of GDP in 2013. Now, sustainable…
Fiscal deficit also fuels inflation and depreciation, which makes exports competitive. Inflation means more money in circulation which depreciates the home-currency; it gives exports a competitive advantage in terms of the value of home-currency. We can see this example in India itself; inflation is high and currency depreciating. Depreciations give country a competitive advantage. If we can not exploit the situation due to higher interest rate, is a not a thing to be amazed…

No doubt Indian currency is very weak but that is a good thing and a good thing even when compared to the gains from a strong currency. With a strong currency we buy products of a foreign country and employment is created in foreign. But cheap currency gives exports an impetus which creates employment at home and increases tax base. Currency depreciation is always good. Even if Indian currency depreciates further it will help the economy in the long-run. The larger the gap between the strongest currency and weakest currency the more it will take to converge to its true- value, equilibrium exchange rate. And, the longer will be the advantage of the country “of being cheap” for currency or for products. Currency depreciations have pulled out economies out of recessions. And, developed countries welcome it...

A depreciating currency result in outflow of foreign exchange as happened in INDIA during recent past. Nevertheless, the news about the possible taper of the Quantitative-Easing programme in US also affected the inflows. An outflow of foreign exchange would mean a depreciating currency because the supply of foreign exchange to the economy has decreased because, again, demand for the economy as an investment destination decreases. Low supply means stronger foreign-currency and weaker domestic-currency.  Our ability to pay for imports will decrease, because we can buy less foreign currency since it is strong now. This will result in higher CAD and, therefore, this time we need to push exports so that we can earn more foreign exchange to reduce the CAD gap. But, if there is an inflow it means that the supply of foreign currency to the economy has gone up and the home currency will appreciate now because foreign currency will depreciate since its supply has increased. We know, again, high supply means a weak currency. This will lower the CAD. Our ability to pay for foreign currency and imports will increase. Countries really do not bother to reduce surplus, rather they are more bothered to reduce the deficit. The confidence in an economy is an important determinant of foreign currency inflows and outflows. A healthy economy will attract more foreign currency and a weak one will repel others. Growth rates are an important indicator of economy’s health and confidence. A high growth rate with a high interest rate will attract more foreign capital and vice-versa. High foreign currency inflows reduce the CAD burden and low inflows aggravate it, if exports are not responding. India’s CAD problem was due to high imports and low exports; we have a shortage of foreign currency reserves. A real and natural solution to reduce the CAD is to give a push to exports, but, due to high interest rates nobody took initiative in that direction. Manufacturing in the export sector was very low and India defended its position by exporting non-manufactured products like food-grains, mainly. But, that is not enough to reduce the CAD. Moreover, FIIs and FDIs are not helping us out of this serious CAD problem, because they had become low in the recent years because of low growth rate, but, now improving. India needs an out-of-the-box solution to handle the CAD. We, basically, need to earn foreign exchange in order to bridge the gap between the imports and exports.

The Indian currency depreciated from Rs 45 per-dollar in 2011 to Rs 68-70 in 2013 after which it regained some of it lost value and is, now, trading near Rs 61-63 per-dollar. It is in the interest of the RBI to keep the rupee value strong because then it will have to pay less every dollar, for imports too, and build a strong balance sheet by accumulating more dollars... If the RBI sells dollars and make the exchange rate more affordable it can buy more dollars per rupee. And, by doing so it can keep the demand and supply of US $and the Indian-Rupee match each other. Now that we have accepted that, again, the Indian rupee is overvalued (at Rs 62.5) and we need to bring it closer to its real value or inflation adjusted value near to Rs 58-60 according to the REER (real-affective-exchange rate) index., Some advise the RBI to recoup dollars when the dollar is high. But, why the RBI did not do the same when the rupee was trading 45. The answer probably lies in the fact that the RBI was busy in accumulating gold. The RBI, too, with the investors accumulated a lot of gold last year... which is not a bad investment… gold and dollars are almost substitutes to each other… both enjoy the status of safe-heaven…  Therefore we should see gold as a part of foreign currency reserves and should not press the panic button, and, wait for the right time when it is down and does not increase demand and price of dollar or if it is brought down by supplying more dollars. The question is how much the rupee has a value in the RBI’s mind because it has the autonomy to print currency…

Nevertheless, the depreciation in the Indian unit and interest rate sops by the government made exports more competitive which grew 13% post-depreciation in 2013…

We can earn foreign exchange without resorting to exports and FIIs…Yes, we can earn foreign exchange without pushing for exports and FIIs, but, we will need FDI and, most importantly, in multi-brand retail. We have not opted for imports of goods and the investors in this space will have to source goods and services locally, from India. This is a clause. And, to this we need to add one more clause that when we will supply we will only accept dollars or euros. In the short run we may not be getting too much foreign currency because foreign firms are pouring foreign currency, anyways, to the banks and money market. Yes, banks and money market, but, not in the real market… In the goods and services market…  And in the long run it will definitely help us. I do not think foreign firms will have any problem with this because they can easily borrow money in their respective countries. So where is the big difference? Moreover this would help them because this will make the Indian currency strong in the long-run and they will earn more home currency for themselves.

This will help India in many ways;
(i) Build reserves: It will help us build reserves because that will eventually go through the banking system and in terms of bank deposits, too.
(ii) Strong domestic currency: Supply of the dollars to the economy will improve and the domestic currency will appreciate, other things remaining constant, and,
(iii) Automatic investment: There is a chance that dollar will appreciate because to buy oil we will need dollars. There is a decreasing returns coming out of oil. Demand for dollars is likely to go up with oil-demand and prices, and, with it income and investment in dollars.

Moreover, after gold import compression we have more room to reduce the CAD by compressing steel and coal imports of which INDIA has considerable reserves…

Lack of Skills and Red-Tape, and Technology… 
Demographic dividend makes the Indian story fundamentally strong. Foreign-exchange inflows are influenced by this strong potential growth rate. They are celebrating it. But with an uneducated and unskilled population we are not going reap a huge dividend without increase in productivity and wages/per-capita. The long term goal is to achieve a higher per-capita income and consumption; everybody is heading in that direction. To cut short, a decent lifestyle... Many argue that we need to make people learn “how to fish” instead of giving them fish. Education and skill development is so crucial for an emerging economy that its long term goals can not be achieved without these two. They make people independent who are dependent on the State for their livelihood. The unemployment figures, 2.2, for the year 2011-12 says that employment is not a problem in INDIA but lack of skills are, which increases productivity and wages/income. INDIA is stuck with subsistence wages without proper skills for its masses that can raise their incomes and reduces their exploitation. It is hard to deceive an educated population on matters of what the State has to offer for a “good-life”. The State should focus on making them independent and not dependent…

INDIA has a comparative advantage as far as labor and wages are concerned even when compared with China but high interest rates, lack of skills and technology are blocking rise in exports. Why can not we take advantage of this is largely unexplained? Probably the answer lies in lack of entrepreneurship culture. People are very hesitant to take initiative because of the Red-tape in the process of manufacturing/production. We need to ease rule and regulations to start any process of production. This also may be due to shortage of skill-sets and know-how. People do not know, with skills shortages, that what they can do and what are the opportunities. Both skills and manufacturing are complementary ideas. One can not survive without the other. Skills should be such so that they can be consumed by the market. We need a survey that what skills should we impart so that every Indian is absorbed in the process of growth and development. We should also allow our foreign counterparts to help us in this direction. FDI in education and skills is feasible so that new technologies and skills can come to the Indian market...

 If the government has surplus and wants to invest it somewhere meaning fully it should invest in human capital, on education and skill development. The merit of this kind of investment will be to create more employment opportunities through multiplier. Employment multiplier is older than investment multiplier and is also the root of the same. Keynes used employment multiplier to create investment multiplier. It simply says that if we create employment/investment by public spending it actually creates employment/investment at other places, a multiple of the original employment creation.

The government allotted Rs 1, 000 crore for 10 lakhs youth for skill development in the 2013 budget. I surprise whether we actually have this number of people who need skills up-gradation. India where half of the population is illiterate and poor who can not take care of themselves we, atleast, need to upgrade skills of minimum 1 crore people for which we will need atleast, again,  Rs 1, 00, 000 crore. Skill gap in India has been widely discussed and is recommended by reports and surveys. We needed a big investment so that we can increase the productivity of our labour-force and they can earn higher per capita income. This was a good decision but insufficient to achieve the objective in mind.

The priority for the country in the long run is to increase employment opportunities and a higher per capita income for the growing population and, in short, more tax because of our ever growing demand and magnitude of poverty. No major country is without poverty. Poverty in emerging economies is a major issue and more acute in terms of numbers. Therefore to remove poverty we need more jobs for those do not have a job. Manufacturing may be capital or labor intensive depending on the level of technology but for a labor rich country a labor intensive technology is more appropriate to reduce unemployment. Therefore as far as technology is concerned we need to use more labor intensive technology in manufacturing and they would be cheap compared to capital intensive techniques.


Stagflation…

Indian economy is stagflating… What is stagflation? Low growth-rate and high inflation. India’s growth performance has been low than its previous performances, before 2012. India was growing 9% but now the growth rate is 5%, since past few years. India’s growth performance is good when we compare India with the West but low when compared to China and INDIA’s previous performances... it is a low growth rate given India’s population and poverty. Moreover, as far as inflation is concerned it is also pointing in the same direction, stagflation. Inflation in INDIA is 7% (WPI) and CPI above 10%. When we compare India’s inflation with other countries we find that others have chosen 2% inflation for themselves, in the west, and, complete price stability in China. Inflation in China is 3%. No matter what target we set for ourselves but theoretically we need complete price stability if we are not trying to break recession. INDIA’s inflation (CPI) is high. Therefore, on both fronts, growth rate and inflation, the present situation suggests a stagflation type scenario...

Policy Paralysis…

The pressure on prices is and was not only because of demand but also because of supply-side, and to a greater extent. The decision taken by RBI not to reduce aggressively has once again put the ball back to the government’s court to hasten the reforms process and put it back on the burner. The government has proved itself, once more, a major road-block in the direction of growth and development, poverty- alleviation, mainly. The government has failed at two occasions. Firstly, it could not ensure an efficient supply mechanism for food, it lost the crucial time to act, and it is only preparing ground so far. All the decisions are stuck for years even in case of food grains which are more than full in government storage and sometimes are rotten there. And, secondly on FDI in multi-brand retail, an area in which the government failed to tell and convince people that how it can help the Indian-Economy. In our view it will help agriculture to become more profitable and would boost investment there. Our total economy would be benefited by higher incomes because demand would spurt. These both are not independent of each other and point towards the same goal of price stability which the FM committed while fiscal consolidation. The government needs to be more serious and quick if it has to address the issue of growth. So far, it has only created propaganda...

While Concluding…


The only thing that is holding Indian growth story back is high inflation and even restricting the use of fiscal policy to boost growth… Inflation in India is a structural problem. Markets are not that efficient. They take too much time to respond to increases in demand pressure. They do not operate with sufficient reserve or spare capacity. Any little increase in demand is likely to upset the supply conditions. Prices are very sensitive under these supply conditions. I hope FDI in multi brand retail would help removing supply side bottlenecks and consumers (we all consume but we all do not produce or supply) would be benefited in form of lower prices. As far as the question of expected growth rate of the Indian-Economy is concerned we are sure economists would not have expected a growth rate lower than 7-8% if RBI had lowered the key interest rates-repo and reverse repo rates- by 50-100 basis points. One more thing that any central bank takes into account is unemployment rate. If unemployment increases, growth rate decreases and vice-versa. Only if the unemployment rate in India above the RBIs target, above “natural rate” or NAIRU, it has some room to lower key interest rates by choosing a higher inflation target around 10%. If it does so we can easily see the growth rate of Indian economy around 7-8% in the next 4-6 months. If, again, infrastructure and supply side bottlenecks were not there the chances are that the economy would grow with a growth rate more than the rate of inflation (WPI), means 7-8%, because inflation is also an index of increase in consumer spending even if it is under compulsion, read price-rise. The higher (rational) the inflation target set by an economy or the actual inflation the higher the growth rate probably it can achieve. As soon as the food-inflation comes down with the implementation of the Food-Security-Bill we will have more room for aggressive monetary easing. We are worried about foreign inflows even when our interest rates are high due to elevated inflation... There are three major sources of liquidity, liquidity from monetary policy, liquidity from fiscal policy and liquidity from foreign sources. We although pursued a tight monetary policy but we never disallowed investment from the other two sources… We were worried about drying-up of foreign sources because we can not reduce interest rates at home because of high inflation. Nevertheless the CAD was a concern… we needed to improve our foreign exchange reserves for a good rating…Therefore, liquidity can come from any or all of the three major sources. Therefore, again, we need not to worry about foreign currency outflows because when capital will leave your shores that would also bring inflation down and we have more room for loose monetary policy at home. Quantitative-Easing (QE) in the US is an unconventional monetary policy which is poised to go down one day; if QE dries-up we can easily cut-back on interest rates and improve liquidity to the economy but only when the Food-Security-Bill is implemented and inflation comes down close to our target. Demand for cereals has a considerable weight in the CPI and the government has enough stock of food. If inflation and supply side factor are considered it is a structural problem because of high inflation, especially oil (we can do little about) and food, which are stuffed in government coffers. It is all the indifference of the government which has made prices overshoot the inflation target, and this is about food and food prices... Therefore, if prices are high due to mismanagement of the government and fiscal spending (too much), it is a structural problem. Liquidity I do not think is a problem since inflation is high and prices are a problem, “too much money chasing the government food stock”... It is important to bring Food Security bill than to attract FDI in multi brand retail. Both are aimed at controlling inflation by removing supply side bottlenecks for food... The demerit of FDI in multi brand retail is that it makes us dependent on foreign capital inflows. We agree that FDI's are long-term investments but food-security is in our own hands and we are delaying its transmission to higher growth rate because high food prices are stopping us in from lowering interest rates…  Fiscal policy has pumped so much liquidity in the system that the economy has reached its limits pushing the prices above the roof in the face of higher wages/income. Both monetary and fiscal policies can give demand a boost... Therefore liquidity is coming out of the fiscal policy. The RBI while manipulating interest rates should also take into account the Fiscal-Deficit. Everybody is admitting that it (the deficit) is high including rating agencies… The rate of inflation may be gauge of liquidity in any system, we even make use of the notion that “more money supply, more inflation”. Therefore, money supply can also be increased/decreased through fiscal policy... We’ve heard many people saying that there is a problem of liquidity but when we see the rate of inflation (above 10%) we have a “real-gauge of liquidity” too. We believe our (new) RBI Governor (Raghuram Rajan) will take fiscal deficit (too) into account before deciding for interest rates. We think we have case for increasing interest rates… RBI has not one but two big reasons to hike interest rates. Number one inflation which is above 10% but we do not consider CPI as an index for inflation. We have accepted WPI as a gauge of inflation, more appropriate for rate cuts. According to CPI both food and fuel inflation are above 10%... Therefore to restrict demand and bring it down near to 5% we need to raise interest rates. The second reason is falling growth-rate of bank deposits. Our deposit growth rate is lower than our lending growth rate which is the second reason to increase interest rates. People are discouraged because the interest rate they are getting for their savings is less than rate of inflation. Means real interest rates (nominal interest rate minus inflation) have become negative. Higher interest will also attract foreign currency inflows…

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Appreciation is important...


Article;
Improved jobs inflation offer modest eurozone respite.

Comment;
…”unemployment is high and deflation risks persist” it means we need to remove excess supply of labor by reducing wages/income. Deflation means prices are falling, a downward bias... it means the market is trying to correct itself but our inflation targeting is making things worse. We are not trying to let the popular wish materialize. What we should do is to let the economies deflate. Prices and wages/income will fall. But we have evidence of nominal downward-wage-rigidity in many parts of the Europe but as we say that there is a downward pressure on the prices which is an evidence of no downward rigidity in case of prices, opposite of what Keynes said. It means prices will fall more than wages means a rise in real wages/income. Which would increase demand to remove excess labor supply. Precisely called (again) the Pigou-Effect. And, if we want to increase the wealth-effect we can float a lower denomination of Euro which will increase the space between which the prices can fall. I think the Union should let the member countries with high unemployment deflate and low unemployment countries inflate their economies (already suggested by Paul Krugman). Precisely means real depreciation in countries with high unemployment and nominal appreciation  depreciation in low unemployment countries. The economies should grow and appreciate either in nominal sense or real sense. I think the Union should give the countries liberty to print currencies in lower denomination (of Euro) which is expected to keep money-supply intact even in situation of distress. They are too much dependent… 

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Deflation, as rational expectation...


Article;
Is QE lowering rate of inflation.

Comment;
We are replacing illiquid assets with liquid assets which means we can expect inflation. More liquidity, more inflation... In this sense QE is inflationary... But i agree with interest rate increase because interest cost will go up, prices will go -up. Our purpose to generate inflation will be solved. We want a policy which can make people spend more; it is a demand problem, even if it is under compulsion under price-rise. If inflation is high people will have to spend more. But if prices go down due to disinflation, probably deflation, people will spend willingly because now they have more money, they do not need wages/income to increase, when prices fall real wages increase. We do not need persistent deflation but a short-period of lower prices to remove excess supply and then back to the normal. The problem with QE is that we need to pursue it for a very long-time if we have to bring unemployment to its natural rate because we need to remove excess supply and we will have to wait till people’s income increase, which is constant in the short-run. Higher real wages are easy to achieve than a nominal appreciation during a recession hang-over.

Our other problem is liquidity-trap a situation which has made people accumulate reserve and post-pone spending because they are expecting a deflation and interest rate are at zero. However, to improve savings in banks we need to improve return on savings. We will not need QE to improve banks balance-sheet it will get repaired itself. More reserves for lending.

I think deflation is also a rational expectation because when prices are elevated after a period of increase people expect it to come down during recession. We should not go opposite of the popular-expectation…

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Low inflation also supports low unemployment...


Article;
13.3 unemployment-rate in 15-29 age group in 2012-13 Labour-Ministry -Survey.

Comment;
Higher productivity means higher wages which also indirectly means we are under-paid and we are doing jobs longer. Use of skills make any task easier or takes less time therefore we need to match skills with jobs. Without which any task would be a little difficult or harder. We have to work a little more harder and longer. We are paid according to the marginal product which would be less if we are employed elsewhere, wrong skills and job match. In this sense we are over-employed because we are getting less and working same hours as the right jobs and skill match. We are over-employed because we are being paid less. Nevertheless the problem of over-employment co-exist with unemployment in INDIA because we are growing slower and are adding less jobs every quarter because of, again, high inflation and interest rates which has put a hold on investment. Our real wages are low also because of high inflation. We need to improve real wages if we want to correct the “tag” over-employment because it restricts the economy’s demand and consumption which is directly responsible for the level of employment and growth. Our RBI Governor is giving more importance to inflation over unemployment which also depends on the same (inflation). If inflation goes down interest rates will go down and real-wages, investment, employment and growth will pick-up. A low level of inflation is also necessary for a high level of employment or low level of unemployment…

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Wrong policy moves (US)...


Article;
Sensex, America and elections its three to tango.

Comment;
This time it (QE taper) looks real because at one occasion according to a FED official probably the whole QE program is misdirected and even harmful... Moreover asset price inflation and another-bubble fear could be the probable cause of sooner than expected QE tapering. But at another occasion Bernake said that interest rates will remain low ever after the end of the QE program until unemployment rate drops to 6.5 %. I think Bernake is going to surprise us this time before he leaves. We need to look carefully in to the words "misdirected and even harmful"… i think the FED is going to accept its policy mistake… because of its wasteful effort to reinforce higher inflation expectations to come out of liquidity-trap... It may be wrong to take the economy in the wrong direction when the economy should go for an internal devaluation which means a lower level of wages and income to achieve full-employment but the economy would generate demand by lowering prices but we have evidences of downward wage rigidity which may prove useful because prices will fall more than wages and that would mean a gain in terms of real-wages… However Keynes said the same thing for prices downward rigidity… But we have evidence of persistent deflation in economies like Japan… The FED too said it was expecting a deflation and is fighting deflation. So, downward price-rigidity is not supported by the evidences. Wrong policy moves…

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Let people save...


Article;
INDIA and the slowing economy Chidambaram squares-off RBI again.

Comment;
If people want to save more we should not try to manipulate them... A higher level of savings would exert a downward pressure on interest rate because supply (of capital) will increase... Good for investment... But investment spending is a bit different... A Capitalist always compares his return on savings in banks and the return from investment and invests only when the return is higher than his savings in banks... Therefore a low rate of interest will encourage the Capitalist to take risk... Higher interest rate in this period will increase savings in this period and will lower interest in the next-period… INDIA is going through the first stage, inflation is high therefore we need higher interest rate so that people consume less and save more… In the next stage, when inflation is down due to higher interest rate in the previous period the central bank would lower interest rate and Capitalist will find investment more profitable… Higher savings in this period will always lower interest rate in the next period but the only problem is high inflation… To restrict demand and inflation we need higher interest rates… Higher interest rate on savings will discourage investment spending, as already said above and also because high interest rate itself, but savings would get benefit of higher interest rates… The central bank should make investment a little unprofitable when compared to savings in banks and by doing that it can target inflation a little better… i think a 10% increase in growth, income and inflation would be compatible with 10% interest on savings in banks…

Friday, November 15, 2013

FM is partially true...


Article;
Monetary-Policy has no impact on food-prices-P Chidambaram.

Comment;


Monetary-Policy affects food prices through loose money supply, and increase in employment, wages and income... if it had not then why we are expecting more rate hikes... Does it mean that our RBI Governor is doing a mindless job..? No because he is trying to control demand through interest rates hikes, both the govt. and RBI can affect demand... The govt. through loose fiscal policy in programmes like MNREGA… it is pumping wages and income... Rural areas got a boost in the same terms (wages and income) and demand is built… It is true that food inflation is not always completely a result of demand side forces and sometimes supply side factors are too responsible… But monetary policy can help controlling prices by controlling demand if supply side measures can not be improved in the short-run as in case of vegetables, it takes time… But inflation in cereals like rice and wheat, of which we have enough stock with the government, is not helping us in bringing inflation down… Therefore when we are done with the supply-side issues to control prices in the short-run we need to manipulate demand a little through monetary policy…

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Different shades of Europe...


Article;
Europes money trap the end is nowhere in sight.

Comment;
Europe should not lower interest rate so much that it forces the economy into liquidity-tarp... At very low levels of interest rate people will find keeping money with them more convenient instead of keeping it in banks... And it will have to print money in order to carry-out its policies because it loses control through interest rates (already zero)… The US used QE when they lost control over interest rate because of ZLB and affected liquidity and money-supply through printing money… Unconventional tool… Europe is trying to infuse demand and economic activity by improving money-supply… And that would require no inflation targeting for some so that wages and prices move to achieve full employment… But the problem is that we have to deal with different shades of prices and unemployment throughout the Europe… Therefore Paul Krugman suggested high inflation for countries like Germany will make Spain more competitive in exports relative to Germany… Brilliant idea…  Therefore we can generalize the argument saying, that, countries with considerable trade surplus and less unemployment should try to inflate their economies and others with deficit and more unemployment should deflate, to contain trade balance within the Union… im not sure about the Union’s such commitment… Money-supply wise the former should increase nominal wages and income and the latter should increase real wages and income. Both ways demand is created…

Neutralize Sacrifice...


Article;
Both America and Europe Central bankers should be pushing prices upwards perils falling.

Comment;
We prefer inflation over deflation because it reduces the value of debt in terms of sacrifice made to repay a loan... Inflation makes the value of money to fall... and if inflation starts falling it increases the value of money in-hand and we will sacrifice more this time... This is a standard explanation "why we choose inflation over deflation..?" But as far as income is concerned it is fixed in the short-run and if under this condition prices start falling within limits it should be a gain because people will save more and will repay their debt soon... This is totally meaning less to assume that the debt condition will deteriorate... Falling prices will release more money for debt-repayment... We use both, fixed and floating kind of interest rates for loan repayment and the banks can adjust interest as per the client's real sacrifice. In this condition banks should try to neutralize the sacrifice. They should move interest rates to achieve this end... Floating rates are (i think) are more appropriate the neutralize the sacrifice...

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Inflation-fighting lacks commitment...


Article;
Bonds, rupee recoup losses after pep talk from Raghuram Rajan.

Comment;
Rs 8000 crore for bond purchases and we are not expecting inflation... What the FED (US) is doing...? It is doing the same thing and is expecting inflation to break liquidity tarp... The US bond purchases and the INDIAN bond purchases are the same type of quantitative easing methods except that the FED is printing money and the RBI is loosening its reserves. Why we are not expecting inflation??? The right thing to do is to sell bonds and not purchase of it... Back in 2011 the RBI loosened CRR two-three times which pushed back high the falling inflation... We are using half-hearted measures to control both demand and supply to rein-in inflation... The commitment to reduce inflation is too flexible...

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Target wages and income (US)...


Article;
Tolerating high unemployment inflicts huge damage on US economy.

Comment;
The policy makers have had a choice between lower prices and high employment. In the past (before recession) prices peaked as high as 6%, with oil, and the policy makers  chose high unemployment in favor of lower prices and price-stability, mainly... What high unemployment did, it stroked income and demand negatively. It was the choice of the policy makers... they knew that the past monetary policy inflated the bubble. They said… “let bubble burst and they will clean up the mess later”… Had the central bank increased interest rates to deflate the bubble there would not be that severe demand slump coupled with liquidity-trap... It (higher interest rate) would have helped both... The central bank failed to send the right-signals to the economy… nevertheless they succeeded in lowering the prices… But then again, to break liquidity-trap, the Fed adopted the task of inflating expectations and started its QE programme. It wanted the public to believe that prices will rise and not fall since falling prices foster more falling prices expectation… They tried to reinforce an expectation so that people do not accumulate currency in the expectation of fall in the general price-level. The QE programme was a partial success in inflating the economy but failed to dent unemployment with a considerable gap... Demand is created when income rises, and, both the Fed and the US policy makers should try to affect the same (income) variable but more directly… Fiscal policy could be a direct option, a direct boost to employment, income and demand… but the government is debt constrained but, again the ZLB and liquidity-trap is a good opportunity to borrow and spend... The policy makers should target wages and income since there has been a consistent real-wage-product gap since 1970s… Deflation could have helped in increasing real-wages and demand through the Pigou-Effect but by adopting inflation targeting it (the Fed) has missed that train…

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

MSF and, demand and speculation...



Last time when Rajan reduced the MSF...

I said…

“The repo-rate hike was expected but the MSF reduction undermines the RBI's credibility against inflation... MSF will affect short-term demand and given the volatility in retail prices which are mainly short-term prices (perishables), we need to control demand... We (in Economics) assume that inflation is a short-term phenomenon; in the long-run we assume zero-inflation. Therefore we need to target inflation in the short term using short term measures like MSF... I think the Governor should have used MSF to restrict short-term liquidity to control demand in the short-run... (Probably) the RBI is using wrong levers to tame demand. If inflation exists in the short-run we also need to use short-term measures like MSF...”


This time i add...
"MSF is used when you have acute cash tightness/emergency/urgent... which has a bearing with demand through liquidity… Last time when the RBI raised MSF it said they want to curb speculation, then why not speculation on commodities...? I think we should keep the MSF tight for speculation of all kinds..."

Sunday, November 3, 2013

More rate hikes likely...


Article;
May have done enough on rate hikes watching economy -Raghuram Rajan.

Comment;
Supply-side issues should entice our new Gov as the possible answers to our economic woes since he is a “Supply-Side economist”. Rajan should have helped the economy’s growth-rate by removing supply-side bottlenecks for food and infra in his CEA avatar but he could not help much under the government pressure because the government needed food-grain for its Food-Security-Bill (populism)… In his new avatar he is supposed to increase supply (G&S) by managing interest rate and money-supply, but, inflation has made his task a little cumbersome…  How we can say that we are done with the interest-rates when the CPI is far high than our target…?  We need to increase short-term rates at least 500 bps if the inflation is at 10 % [but actually it is over (CPI)]... But, the Governor is hesitating to increase short-term rates because the Industry wants rate-cut to produce and earn profits, but, we forget that the hike in interest-rates is also increasing the capitalists’ income by increasing interest rate on his savings if he is not investing... Actually, in theory we assume all savings are identically invested, not completely true. Therefore, a hike in interest- rates will benefit Industry is the same manner it will affect others, higher return on savings, their income will increase… (i think) it is the right time to make our interest-rate regime attractive (as Rangarajan says)… I think he should not feel hesitation in increasing interest rates. It will help all, in form of lower prices too…

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

MSF, the short-run rate...


Article;
RBI hikes repo rate by 25 bps to 7.75 cuts MSF by 25 bps.

Comment;
The repo-rate hike was expected but the MSF reduction undermines the RBI's credibility against inflation... MSF will affect short-term demand and given the volatility in retail prices which are mainly short-term prices (perishables), we need to control demand... We (in Economics) assume that inflation is a short-term phenomenon; in the long-run we assume zero-inflation. Therefore we need to target inflation in the short term using short term measures like MSF... I think the Governor should have used MSF to restrict short-term liquidity to control demand in the short-run... (Probably) the RBI is using wrong levers to tame demand. If inflation exists in the short-run we also need to use short-term measures like MSF...




Sunday, October 27, 2013

The Thresholds...


Article;
RBI may hike interest rate this week MSF rate cut likely.

Comment;
There is a disagreement among the economists about what decides “the right” level of interest rate in an economy? Is it inflation or unemployment, or both? We need higher interest rates to tame inflation and achieve full-employment… Full employment means maximum production of goods and services… Which together becomes the objective of price-stability and full-employment and the RBI has key rates to manage these two. If inflation is above the target we need to increase interest rates to fulfill the price-stability objective and if there unemployment in the economy we need to reduce interest rates, and, if there is full employment and inflation (like INDIA) we need to increase interest rate because it is only increasing the quantity of money and not employment. It is an effort-waste to pump money because it does not reduce real interest rates so that we can buy more (cheap) labor to increase production, there is full-employment… It will only increase wage, demand, and prices… And, if the RBI increases interest rates it will it divert resources for savings and investment. An attractive rate of interest is important to lure savings and investment… If lending growth rate is higher there will be an upward pressure on interest rates to attract savings, people will spend less and save more and employment and production will suffer, prices will fall. Interest-rate hike should be attractive enough to attract savings and strong, too, to reduce some investment and employment…

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Close Gaps...


Article;
Not congress not BJP markets want a stable government.

Comment;
The market is yet to factor-in the effect of repo-rates hike which will be done in October. Economists forecast a 50 basis points hike in the repo-rate. The Taylor-Rule says we need to increase interest rates 1 per-cent if we have to reduce inflation by 1 percent. Therefore if we consider WPI (6.5%) as the main gauge of inflation, because so far the RBI has, we need to increase repo-rates by almost 50 basis points. But when we look at more developed countries they follow CPI as the main index. Therefore if we consider CPI we need to increase repo-rates by 1 per cent every extra percentage of inflation. As far as MSF is concerned the RBI has stated that it wants to close the gap between MSF and repo-rates by 100 basis points which is currently 150 basis points. The Governor is reducing MSF. Either he can reduce and increase MSF and repo-rates by 25 basis points, respectively, or, he can go for a 50 basis points cut in MSF or increase repo-rates by the same (basis points). But as far as the weight on inflation placed by the Governor is concerned he would go for a 50 basis point hike in repo-rates, more expected... The reduction in MSF has received a bit of criticism for stoking inflation. But if the Governor delays rate hikes he would only kick the can down the road, if the market expect 50 basis points hike he should do it without delay. Repo-rate will also affect our savings/deposit growth rate which is less than the lending growth rate. We also need to close this gap, too…

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Indian economy is not demand constrained, it is supply constrained...







"Indian economy is not demand constrained, it is supply constrained."



India's real GDP at 5% is good, not very low, when rich countries are doing at 2%. China is growing a little better at 7%, exports are an advantage. Believe me their nominal GDP must be much higher...
To be more exact, INDIA’s nominal GDP growth rate is equal to real GDP plus inflation means, 5% + 10% (inflation, CPI) = 15% which is not sustainable because inflation is too high, Income, consumption, and saving/investment is lagging behind. It is so high that no bank is giving 15% interest on savings a year. Bank is increasing income 8% a year. However, public and private spending is rising under compulsion under price-rise… 

In the long run when inflation is assumed zero, real GDP growth rate will equal nominal GDP growth rate in equilibrium. The long run potential GDP growth rate of the Indian-Economy is 12% because its population growth rate is 17% (every ten year), and, deducting frictional unemployment of 5% it comes to 12%, the rate of growth of labor force and employment to maintain full employment. Therefore India's full-employment long-run potential growth rate is 12%. And, under equilibrium full-employment long run potential GDP growth rate (12%) = nominal GDP growth rate (12%) = real GDP growth rate (12%). But, the situation is 12% = 15% = 5%.

 The last one, the real GDP growth rate is a long run goal. In the short run we have achieved the target with nominal GDP growth rate at 15%. Indian economy is at full employment with all the supply side constraints. In 2012 the unemployment rate for Indian-Economy fell to 3.8% which is why inflation is so high and persistent. We can not achieve 12% real GDP because we can not tolerate inflation above 10%. The benchmark we have set for our selves. We need patience. No doubt inflation is the major problem… (edit.)


There is absolutely no doubt about the growth potential... the doubt is about when... when we would be able to reduce the interest rates... And, that will happen when inflation comes down to our target (5%)...

As soon as the food-inflation comes down with the implementation of the Food-Security-Bill we will have more room for aggressive monetary easing. We are worried about foreign inflows even when our interest rates are high due to elevated inflation... There are three major sources of liquidity, liquidity from monetary policy, liquidity from fiscal policy and liquidity from foreign sources. We although pursued a tight monetary policy but we never disallowed investment from the other two sources… We were worried about drying-up of foreign sources because we can not reduce interest rates at home because of high inflation. Nevertheless the CAD was a concern… we needed to improve our foreign exchange reserves for a good rating… Therefore, liquidity can come from any or all of the three major sources. Therefore, again, we need not to worry about foreign currency outflows because when capital will leave your shores that would also bring inflation down and we have a room for loose monetary policy at home. QE is an unconventional monetary policy which is poised to go down one day; if QE dries-up we can easily cut-back on interest rates and improve liquidity to the economy but only when the Food-Security-Bill is implemented and inflation comes down close to our target. Demand for cereals has a considerable weight in the CPI and the government has enough stock of food. If inflation and supply side factor are considered it is a structural problem because due to high inflation, especially oil (we can do little about) and food, which are stuffed in government coffers. It is all the indifference of the government which has made prices overshoot the inflation target, and this is about food and food prices... Therefore, if prices are high due to mismanagement of the government and fiscal spending (too much), it is a structural problem. Liquidity I do not think is a problem since inflation is high and prices are a problem, too much money chasing the government food stock. It is important to bring Food Security bill than to attract FDI in multi brand retail. Both are aimed at controlling inflation by removing supply side bottlenecks for food. The demerit of FDI in multi brand retail is that it makes us dependent on foreign capital inflows. I agree that FDI's are long-term investments but food-security is in our own hands and we are delaying its transmission to higher growth rate because high food prices are stopping us in from lowering interest rates…  Fiscal policy has pumped so much liquidity in the system that the economy has reached its limits pushing the prices above the roof in the face of higher wages/income. Both monetary and fiscal can give demand a boost... Therefore liquidity is coming out of fiscal policy. The RBI while manipulating interest rates should also take into account the Fiscal-Deficit. Everybody is admitting that it (the deficit) is high including rating agencies… The rate of inflation may be gauge of liquidity in any system, we even make use of the notion that “more money supply, more inflation”. Therefore, money supply can also be increased/decreased through fiscal policy, too... I’ve heard many people saying that there is a problem of liquidity but when we see the rate of inflation (above 10%) we have a “real-gauge of liquidity” too. I think our (new) Governor will take fiscal deficit (too) into account before deciding for interest rates. I think we have case for increasing interest rates…

The government should aim at removing supply side bottle necks and the RBI should take care of the finances by manipulating interest rates...

What a 25 basis point will do when inflation is in double digits? To be precise, the RBI, for every extra percentage of inflation, should increase interest rate by more than one percent (The Taylor-Rule). Therefore, if the RBI inflation-target is 5% and we have inflation rate of 10% we, at least, need to increase interest rate by 500 basis points. This is not unimaginable… Way back during 1970s, in the US, the Fed’s head Paul Volcker raised interest rate from 11% to 21%... But the unemployment rate rose to 10%. I do not know way back, then, in the US had the kind of unemployment-benefits it has, now. These benefits show our tolerance towards unemployment… Unluckily INDIA has no such mechanism that decides our tolerance towards inflation and luckily real-unemployment (deducting after the various types of unemployment) is not a big problem. It is near 6% (as per our FM), manageable. Therefore unlike the US, in the absence of any unemployment benefits, INDIA can tolerate less unemployment to let the prices cool down. I’m not expecting a knee-jerk reaction but during a slowdown when the source of income dries-up a lower inflation is like an ointment… I can easily expect the RBI to raise interest rates some more. Capitalists will be benefited by the action and the lay man’s relief due to lower prices.  Economists have a good image of “the” Paul Volcker.

It is also expected because lower prices is a relief for all, especially food and oil prices, and when we lower prices by increasing interest rates it is also good for investment… our savings and yield on savings increase… we become richer… Therefore, it is in the interest of the economy to lower prices by increasing interest rates…  An inflation rate of (above) 10% is enough for invoking monetary policy action… We can easily expect another rate hike in the October review.The stock market in INDIA is very responsive, it is responding on all the relevant information. It is active... We in INDIA have subdued the demand pressure by not reducing interest rates... Industry is waiting for rate-cuts so that they can resume (investment) spending... But after the September rate hike the Industry is worried about another such action from the RBI considering high inflation (food and fuel)… Therefore, it is in the interest of the economy to lower prices by increasing interest rates…


We in INDIA are over-employed we are working longer hours and are paid less than our developed country counterparts. “INDIA IS OVER-EMPLOYED” not unemployed. Unemployment is not a problem therefore we need to look at inflation…

Economic growth around...

  Food and fuel inflation is high in INDIA... the main sources of inflation... Lower fuel taxes could help lower inflation and increase prod...