A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, July 3, 2014
Gold swaps to cut imports, ease payment pressure
A salesman displays gold bars inside a jewellery shop on the occasion of the Akshaya Tritiya festival in Hyderabad May 6, 2011.
The RBI would sell relatively impure gold from its own vaults - some
dating back to before independence - and receive the equivalent worth of
purer yellow metal delivered to the Bank of England, under a scheme
outlined on Wednesday.
The swaps would not involve money changing hands, according to three officials aware of the development.
The RBI has parked gold abroad in the past, once in the throes of the
1991 financial crisis. It did a similar swap in 1998, according to a
report at the time, before Russia's default and devaluation caused a
meltdown across emerging markets.
Governor Raghuram Rajan had to contend with a balance-of-payments shock
when appointed last autumn and has taken several steps to improve the
management of India's $315 billion of gold and foreign exchange
reserves.
The old gold is held in the RBI vault at Nagpur, considered to be the
geographical centre of British colonial India - in other words, about as
far away as possible from the international financial system.
Holding the gold offshore would make it possible for the RBI, if needed,
to raise funds using the metal as collateral, or to sell it to defend
the value of the rupee.
IMPORT SUBSTITUTION
The so-called location swaps would also reduce the need for imports in
gold-mad India. On average, Indians bought 2.3 tonnes of gold a day -
the weight of a small elephant - until about a year ago. Most was
hoarded and handed down as heirlooms to hedge against inflation.
"To the extent the banks will get the gold, they will not have to
import. So this should take some pressure off gold imports," one of the
officials said.
The RBI has approached several state-run, private and foreign banks and
agencies to carry out the swap deal, including State Bank of India,
Corporation Bank, Bank of Nova Scotia and MMTC, according to industry
sources.
"The entire cost will have to be borne by the local bank," said a senior
official from one private bank. In a letter, the RBI asks the banks to
respond by July 15 but does not specify swap ratios or timing of the
deals, the official added.
No official comment was available from the banks. The officials declined
to be identified as they were not authorised to talk to the media. The
RBI has officially confirmed the proposed gold swap but not elaborated
on the reason for it.
The central bank in September announced steps to raise money from
overseas investors and has intervened frequently since March to buy
dollars, building its reserves to guard against any possible selloff of
the rupee.
At the same time, India is seeking to reduce its reliance on gold
imports, which have cost the country dearly. India paid $54 billion to
import 1,017 tonnes of gold in the year ending March 2013, which helped
the current account deficit balloon to a record high of 4.8 percent of
gross domestic product.
The current account deficit was a major factor in last year's rupee
crisis, in which capital outflows were triggered by a warning that the
U.S. Federal Reserve would wind down its monetary stimulus. As a result,
the RBI and government took stringent steps to curb gold imports.
After those measures, gold imports slumped to just $5.3 billion in the
March quarter, helping to narrow the current account deficit to just 0.2
percent of GDP versus 3.6 percent a year earlier.
But the World Gold Council reckons that 200-250 tonnes of gold have been
smuggled into India since the imposition of import controls.
"The moment the supply of gold increases, the supply from smuggling will
come down," said Madan Sabnavis, chief economist at CARE Ratings.
The RBI holds 557 tonnes of gold, and according to the World Gold Council it has the 11th-largest gold reserves.
However, the officials said there was no deeper meaning attached to the
timing of the gold swap and no connection to Finance Minister Arun
Jaitley's maiden budget on July 10. One of the officials called it a
"housekeeping" activity.
"There is no monetary angle to this. It is an executive decision. It
would be far fetched to connect this operation to the budget," the
second official said.