India macro fundamentals strong, rupee not depreciating against any currency other than U.S. dollar, says Nirmala Sitharaman
The Hindu
Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman defends Indian rupee stability against U.S. dollar, citing strong macroeconomic fundamentals amid criticism.
Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Sunday (February 2, 2025) rejected criticism over the slide of the Indian rupee, saying it has depreciated only against a strengthening U.S. dollar but remained stable against all other currencies because of the strong macroeconomic fundamentals.
In an interview with PTI, she said a 3% depreciation in the rupee against the U.S. dollar in past few months is a matter of concern as it makes imports costlier, but she rejected criticism that the local currency has seen all-round weakness.
"I am concerned but I will not accept the criticism that 'Oh Rupee is weakening!' Our macroeconomic fundamentals are strong. Rupee wouldn't be stable against all the currencies if the fundamentals were weak," she said.
The Indian rupee has been under pressure in the last few months but it continues to be the least volatile currency against the U.S. dollar among its Asian and global peers. The reasons for the rupee hitting record lows almost on a daily basis against the U.S. dollar range from widening trade deficit to a surge in the dollar index after the US Federal Reserve hinted at fewer rate cuts in 2025.
The Reserve Bank has reportedly spent $77 billion from its foreign exchange reserves to defend the rupee from falling sharply in the spot market, taking India's foreign exchange reserves down to $629.557 billion as on January 30, 2024, from $701.176 billion on October 4, 2024.
"Rupee's volatility is against the dollar. Rupee has behaved in a far more stable fashion than any other currency," Ms. Sitharaman said.
Rupee volatility is noticeable as the dollar is strengthening.
The Budget has proposed the setting up of a Maritime Development Fund to support India’s maritime sector by providing financial assistance, via equity or debt securities, which will directly benefit in financing for ship acquisition and aims at boosting Indian-flagged ships’ share in the global cargo volume up to 20% by 2047.