As Rupee Hits New
Lows, Real Effective Exchange Rate Soars to an All-Time High
The real effective exchange rate (REER) index of
the rupee touched a record 108.14 in November, strengthening by 4.5 per cent
during this calendar year, according to the latest Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
data.
[ABS News Service/27.12.2024]
The
rupee is hitting fresh lows against the US dollar each day, yet its exchange
rate has scaled an all-time-high in “real effective” terms.
The
real effective exchange rate (REER) index of the rupee touched a record 108.14
in November, strengthening by 4.5 per cent during this calendar year, according
to the latest Reserve Bank of India (RBI) data.
The REER measures the rupee’s value vis-à-vis not only the
dollar, but other global currencies as well. In this case, it is a weighted
average of the rupee’s exchange rate against a basket of 40 currencies of
countries that account for about 88 percent of India’s annual exports and
imports. The REER also adjusts for inflation differentials between India and
each of these trading partners.
The rupee’s REER – an index similar to that for consumer
prices or industrial production, with 2015-16 as the base year and currency
weights derived from the shares of the individual countries in India’s total
foreign trade – fell from 105.32 in January 2022 to 99.03 in April 2023. But
since then, it has been on an appreciating trajectory, climbing to 107.20 in
October and 108.14 in November this year (see chart).
The main reason for the divergence – the rupee’s
simultaneous weakening and strengthening – has to do with the dollar’s
behaviour over the past three months, especially post Donald Trump’s victory in
the US presidential elections on November 5.
Between September 27 and December 24, the dollar index
futures – a gauge of the greenback’s value relative to a basket of six
currencies (euro, Japanese yen, British pound, Canadian dollar, Swedish Krona
and Swiss franc), with March 1973 as base – has gone up from 99.88 to 108.02.
Much of that has been after November 5, when the index stood at 102.98.
Between September 27 and December 24, the rupee has
depreciated from 83.67 to 85.19 against the dollar. During the same period,
however, it has appreciated from 93.6 to 88.56 versus the euro, 112.05 to
106.79 versus the UK pound and 0.5823 to 0.5425 versus the Japanese yen.
In other words, the rupee isn’t weakening as much as the
dollar is strengthening -against all currencies. The dollar is strengthening –
against all currencies. The dollar is strengthening because of Trump’s public
pronouncements favouring universal tariff hikes (more so, on imports of Chinese
goods), deficit-financed income tax cut and mass deportations of illegal
immigrants. These, if translated into policy actions, are expected to drive up
inflation in the US and, in force, force the US Federal Reserve to keep
monetary policy tight. As 10-year government bond yields there have soared,
from 3.75 percent to 4.59 percent between September 27 and December 24, it has
led to capital flowing out of all countries, India included, to the US.
From a longer timeframe, the rupee has, since the start of
2022, dipped against the dollar (from 74.30 to 85.19), euro (84.04 to 88.56)
and pound (100.30 to 106.79), while firming up only against the yen (0.6454 to
0.5425). Despite that, is a result of inflation in India being higher relative
to its major partners.
Assuming the rupee was “fairly” valued in 2015-16, when the
REER was set to 100, any value above 100 signifies overvaluation and the
exchange rate not falling enough to offset higher domestic inflation. The rupee
is, to that extent, highly overvalued today, making imports into India cheaper
and exports from the country less cost competitive. It probably also explains
why the RBI is now allowing the rupee to fall – at least against the dollar.