Rupee Depreciation and the Role of Diplomacy in Currency Stability

Context:
The Indian Rupee depreciated by nearly 6% since April 2025, primarily due to capital outflows triggered by trade tensions with the United States.

Key Highlights:

  • External Trigger
  • U.S. imposed 50% import duty on Indian exports.
  • Heightened trade friction led to investor uncertainty.
  • Capital Flow Trends
  • Net capital inflows turned negative at –$3,900 million (Apr–Dec 2025).
  • Previous year saw +$10,615 million inflows.
  • Macroeconomic Indicators
  • GDP growth: 7.4% (2025 estimate).
  • CPI inflation: 1.33% (2025).
  • Current Account Deficit: 0.76% of GDP (improved from 1.35%).
  • Trade deficit widened to $96.58 billion.
  • RBI’s Role
  • Since 1993, India follows a market-determined exchange rate regime.
  • RBI intervenes only to curb excess volatility, not to fix exchange rate levels.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Capital Outflows: Movement of financial assets outside the country.
  • Devaluation: Official downward adjustment of currency value (distinct from depreciation).
  • Trade Deficit: Imports exceeding exports.
  • RBI uses tools such as forex reserves, open market operations, interest rate policy.

Relevant Mains Points:

  1. Causes of Rupee Depreciation
  • Geopolitical tensions.
  • Capital flight.
  • Rising trade deficit.
  • U.S. protectionist policies.
  1. Why Devaluation is Unsuitable
  • Raises import costs (oil, electronics).
  • India’s exports have high import content, limiting competitiveness gains.
  • Inflationary pressures.
  1. Importance of Diplomacy
  • Trade negotiations can reduce tariff barriers.
  • Strengthening bilateral relations stabilizes investor sentiment.
  • Aligns with India’s multi-alignment strategy.
  1. Broader Implications
  • Currency volatility affects external debt servicing.
  • Impacts inflation and fiscal management.

Way Forward

  • Prioritize diplomatic resolution of tariff disputes.
  • Strengthen export diversification.
  • Deepen domestic capital markets to reduce reliance on volatile FPI flows.

UPSC Relevance:

  • GS 3: Indian Economy – External sector, exchange rate management
  • GS 2: International Relations – Trade diplomacy
  • Prelims: Exchange rate systems, capital flows
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