
Should the rupee8217;s steady fall against the dollar really be worrying the whole country? The matter might not have been such an issue if the Reserve Bank had not intervened in the market precipitately, without success, and drawn attention to its concern and inability to do much. The room for dire prophecies to become self-fulfilling is especially large here. Having failed in its direct attempt, the RBI later tried to talk up the currency by declaring its intention to do the needful to stabilise the rupee. Only this time its declaration lacks credibility, because it is seen to have tried and failed. As much as the central bank denies that it has a floor in mind, it gives the game away every time the rupee goes through some benchmark figure, in this case 45. It is worth asking what is so sacrosanct about a round figure, except a psychological value imparted precisely by the Bank8217;s actions and pronouncements.
This is hardly to say that the rupee8217;s steady and by now really rather precipitous fall this year should be no matter for concern at all. But the repeated experience has been that loud action usually makes matters worse than cautious inaction by giving away the Bank8217;s inability to really make a difference. In this instance, for example, the situation is apparently made worse by exporters hanging on to their dollars in the firm belief that the rupee will fall further. This has compounded a situation created in part by high imports and pricier oil imports this year and by barely trickling in direct foreign investment inflows. But that still begs the question: should the rest of the country, aside from the RBI whose job it is, be worrying its head about the rupee8217;s fall? Probably not, unless matters come to a pass when interest rates need to rise sharply to arrest the currency8217;s fall. It is reassuring that both the central bank and the finance ministry seem for now to agree that if there has to be interventionit should be through the sale of dollars rather than an upping of interest rates at this stage.