However, a few experts think the impact will be minimal. Argues Ajay Shah, former consultant to the finance ministry, "Indian companies have enough headroom to absorb some adverse currency movements. India's productivity gains are drowning out the currency story." Similarly, Pai feels that software firms have impressive growth rates and, therefore, the rupee will not hit their bottomlines significantly.
Others say the rupee hasn't appreciated much against other currencies like the euro and pound, so India's exports to Europe will remain competitive. Agrees commerce secretary G.K. Pillai, "Last year, a drop in the rupee didn't affect our exports. If the rupee stays around Rs 41 to a dollar, it shouldn't make any difference to our exports prospects. It could be a cause for concern if it goes below Rs 40."
What India Inc is bothered with is that the combined effect of high inflation, interest rates, forex reserves and dollar-rupee rate does not impact demand and investments. For that will slow down growth, reduce corporate earnings, de-rate the stockmarket indices further and affect other asset categories like real estate. The multiplier effect could even result in stagflation—stagnant GDP growth with high inflation. Says NCAER's Kanhaiya Singh, "The problem is that the economy is being pushed into a high interest rate regime."
Several experts feel that both the finance ministry and the RBI are being forced to pursue short-term tactics to fight inflation in an election year. The thinking within the Congress party is that it has lost a few state elections because of rising prices of basic items like foodgrains. Therefore, fire-fighting the price rise has become an overriding objective of the government. But as a few CEOs and senior managers told Outlook, "Any panicky short-term measures are not desirable and will precipitate adverse results."
RBI's Reddy and FM P. Chidambaram are in an unenviable position. They have to spur growth by wooing investments. They have to control inflation by pushing up interest rates, controlling demand, and allowing the rupee to appreciate. But a strong rupee can stymie exports—and demand—and affect growth. This can slow down foreign capital flows and impact investments and growth. The only hope for the two policymakers is that the Indian economy and its private sector is mature and strong enough to absorb the short-term adverse effects and continue on their growth trajectory.
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