Rupee Devaluation, Depreciation, Export and Import
Let’s us discuss in this post a few confusing but ever green concepts in economics related to currency market. You might have seen news headlines like “Indian rupee falling” or “Rupee falls to Rs.65 against US dollar”. Have you ever wondered why rupee is falling? Who fixes the value of Indian rupee as Rs.65 per 1 US dollar? This article will explore these areas. We shall see in this article, the difference between Rupee Devaluation and Rupee Depreciation. Let’s also trace the value of Indian rupee with respect to US dollar from 1947 and see how a fall in rupee value affects exports and imports.
Who fix the value of Indian Rupee against US dollar?
Interesting question. Do you think Indian government fix the value of Indian Rupee against US dollar? If not, who fixes it? RBI? No; at present none of these entities fix the value of Indian Rupee. Now the value of Indian Rupee (or any other currency) is determined by market. Yes, Market! The demand and supply forces in currency market. If the demand for Indian currency is high, Indian rupee will have high value, and if demand is low, it will depreciate.
Also, understand that a high value for Indian currency means, the exchanged rate of Indian rupee against US dollar will be less. Or to explain with an example : Rs.40 against 1 US dollar means high value for Indian rupee when compared with Rs.70 against 1 US dollar.
So, if market forces determine the value of a currency, that type of system is called Floating Rate System. India has adopted floating rate system since 1975. (This means that our Prime Minister, Finance Minister or RBI chairperson cannot fix the currency exchange rate at the click of a button. But they still have some control – through policy measures or by controlling foreign exchange reserves).
Fixed Rate System vs Floating Rate System
If government or RBI fix the exchange rate of a currency (and does not allow any variations according to demand and supply forces in market), such a system is called Fixed Rate system. It is also called Bretton Woods system or Pegged Currency System. India was following this kind of system till 1975 and partial controls till 1993. Since this currency valuation mechanism is artificial, most of the countries including India changed to Floating Rate System where currency market determines the value of a currency.
Rupee Devaluation vs Rupee Depreciation
The term devaluation is used when the government reduces the value of a currency under Fixed Rate System. When the value of currency fall under Floating Rate System, it is calleddepreciation. Revaluation is a term which is used when there is a rise of currency to the relation with a foreign currency in a fixed exchange rate. In floating exchange rate correct term would be appreciation. Altering the face value of a currency without changing its foreign exchange rate is a redenomination, not a revaluation.
History of Indian Rupee : A comparison of Indian Rupee Value vs US dollar
Remember that we were following fixed rate system till 1975. We had partial controls on currency market till 1993, when as per IMF standards we liberalized our entire economy.
- 1947 : 1 US$ = 1.00 INR (Sounds interesting, uh? :-))
- 1948 : 1 US$ = 4.79 INR.
- 1965 : 1 US$ = 4.79 INR.
- 1966 : 1 US$ = 7.57 INR.
- 1971 : 1 US$ = 8.39 INR.
- 1985 : 1 US$ = 12.0 INR.
- 1991 : 1 US$ = 17.9 INR.
- 1993 : 1 US$ = 31.7 INR.
- 2000 : 1 US$ = 45.0 INR.
- 2013 : 1 US$ = 60.0 INR.
PS : For those interested, here is an article from economic times about the Rupee journey since independence.
Value of Indian Rupee : Does it matter?
It should not be forgotten that exchange rate of a currency is not really an indicator of the economic strength of a country. There are many countries including China which favors devaluation of currency. Also, economic position of India in 2013 is far better than that of 1947, though there is fall in Rupee value. At present what worries Finance Minister and RBI governor is not the falling Indian Rupee, but the fluctuations in the currency market. What India needs is stabilization of Indian Rupee value, be in Rs. 50, Rs.60 or Rs.70 per 1 US dollar. But if rupee is Rs.60 one day and if it Rs. 65 the next day, it shows high volatility. Such a situation is not good for the economy and that will only trigger more fall in Indian rupee.
Depreciation and Appreciation of Indian Rupee : Relation with Exports and Imports
UPSC has often asked this question – directly and indirectly – how does a fall in rupee affects exports and imports? Wait, before analyzing this topic let’s see one more question :-) Why do governments devalue their currencies? They do it mainly to improve the balance of trade (or in other words increase exports and decrease imports!).
Exports vs Falling in Indian Rupee Value : The local currency effect
A devaluation means that more local currency is needed to purchase imports and exporters get more local currency when they convert the export proceeds (the foreign exchange that they get for their exports). In other words: imports become more expensive – and exporters earn more money. This is supposed to discourage imports – and to encourage exports and, in turn, to reduce trade deficits. Clear,uh?
That was an explanation giving stress to the local currency angle. Let’s see the same case analyzing the volume effect.
That was an explanation giving stress to the local currency angle. Let’s see the same case analyzing the volume effect.
Exports vs Falling in Indian Rupee Value : The volume effect
Assume that India is the exporting country and America as the importing country. India exports apples to America. Assume that India devalued India rupee from Rs. 50 =1 dollar to Rs.100 = 1 dollar. The cost of an apple in India before and after rupee devaluation is Rs.50. Now analyse what will happen.
- Before rupee devaluation : Americans will get only 1 apple for 1 dollar.
- After rupee devaluation : Now Americans will get 2 apples for 1 dollar.
Think from American perspective. For them earlier with 1$, they used to get only 1 apple. Now after fall in Indian rupee they get 2 apples. So importing from India has become really cheaper for America and they will use this case to their maximum advantage. This case will favour exporters in India in two ways : (1) They can now sell more apples (volume effect), trade volume will increase. (2) Indian currency they get when converted is now higher than before. (It was Rs.50 before, now it is Rs.100 – for 1 US$ received)
Thus, every time there is a fall in rupee against US dollar, exporters from India are benefited. (Eg: Software companies, sea food exporters etc.) This situation badly affects importers or those who wish to visit US for holidays as they need more local currency to get the same service or product.
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