Forex Management Latest News
- Amid rising external sector pressures triggered by the ongoing West Asia conflict, weakening forex reserves, and sustained foreign portfolio outflows, the GoI and the RBI are considering a series of measures to attract foreign capital inflows.
- One of the key proposals under discussion is reducing — or even eliminating — the withholding tax on interest earned by foreign investors on Indian government bonds.
- The debate reflects India’s broader challenge of balancing exchange rate stability, foreign exchange (forex) reserve conservation, inflation management, and investor confidence in a volatile global environment marked by high US interest rates and geopolitical uncertainty.
Why is India Concerned
- Pressure on India’s external sector:
- India is currently facing multiple external vulnerabilities:
- Declining forex reserves
- Persistent foreign portfolio investor (FPI) outflows
- Rising crude oil prices due to the West Asia conflict
- Weakening rupee against the US dollar
- High global interest rates, especially in the United States
- The RBI’s forex reserves reportedly depleted by nearly $38 billion in two months, intensifying concerns over the sustainability of India’s external account.
- India is currently facing multiple external vulnerabilities:
- Key objective: The government aims to conserve forex reserves, stabilise the capital account, prevent excessive rupee depreciation, and improve India’s attractiveness for global investors.
Proposal Under Discussion – Cutting Withholding Tax on Government Bonds
- What is withholding tax?
- Withholding tax refers to the tax deducted at source on interest income earned by foreign investors from Indian government bonds.
- Currently, foreign investors pay around 20% withholding tax. Earlier, a concessional 5% rate existed until 2023.
- India’s rate is considered among the highest globally. For example, in China it is 10% (temporary exemptions in place since 2018), Vietnam (5%), while Malaysia exempts government bonds from this levy.
- Additional complexities in India:
- Investors from countries with which India has double taxation avoidance agreements (DTAAs) pay lower rates.
- Investors without Indian tax residency certificates face higher burdens.
- Tax is imposed on gross income. Losses cannot be adjusted against gains.
- This reduces the attractiveness of Indian debt markets.
- Objective behind reducing it – To attract FPI:
- Lower taxation could Improve post-tax returns for foreign investors, increase demand for Indian government securities, bring in dollar inflows, strengthen the rupee, and reduce pressure on forex reserves.
- Senior policymakers believe easing tax-related “friction” may improve India’s competitiveness vis-à-vis other emerging markets.
Why Policymakers Are Divided
- Concerns over effectiveness: A section of policymakers doubts whether tax cuts alone can attract significant inflows under current global conditions.
- Major concerns:
- High US interest rates: US treasury yields remain elevated, making American assets more attractive and reducing risk appetite for emerging markets.
- Geopolitical uncertainty: The ongoing West Asia conflict has increased global risk aversion and oil price volatility.
- Limited immediate impact: Officials fear that foreign inflows may not rise meaningfully even after tax cuts, and India may appear economically vulnerable if the policy fails.
Forex Conservation Measures Already Initiated
- Import duty hike on gold: The government has increased import duties on gold, precious metals. As India imports large quantities of gold, it increases the current account deficit (CAD), and drains forex reserves.
- PM’s appeal: Reduce gold purchases, avoid extravagant foreign travel, use public transport and carpooling, minimise fuel consumption, etc. These measures reflect a broader strategy of economic austerity and forex conservation.
- Debate on fuel prices and austerity:
- Officials believe India has delayed fuel price adjustments and austerity measures compared to other Asia-Pacific economies (happened in the region 2 months ago).
- As rating agencies and investors closely monitor fiscal discipline, suppressing fuel prices may worsen fiscal pressures, and undermine India’s macroeconomic credibility.
- Thus, controlled fuel price increases are seen as increasingly inevitable.
RBI’s Forex Intervention Strategy
- Massive intervention in currency markets: The RBI has actively intervened in forex markets to stabilise the rupee.
- Gross forex sales by RBI: < $100 billion each in 2020-21 and 2021-22, $213 billion in 2022-23, $153 billion in 2023-24, $399 billion (record high) in 2024-25, and $166 billion in 2025-26 (first 11 months).
- Additionally: RBI held a net short forward position of $104 billion by February-end.
Rupee Depreciation and Capital Flight
- Rupee weakened by nearly 11% against the US dollar over the last year. Since the onset of the West Asia war, it has fallen another 5% (reaching a new low of Rs 95.96 against a US dollar on 14th May 2026).
- Foreign portfolio investors withdrew nearly $22.5 billion from Indian financial markets in 2026 so far.
- This has amplified pressure on equity markets, bond markets, and exchange rate stability.
Lessons from the 2013 Taper Tantrum
- Background:
- When the rupee sharply depreciated due to the US Federal Reserve’s ‘taper tantrums’, RBI had opened a FCNR(B) [Foreign Currency Non-Resident (Bank)] deposit swap window for a period of just under three months.
- During this window, banks raised $26 billion, helping boost the central bank’s forex reserves.
- Proposal for Special Deposit Schemes rejected:
- Officials considered introducing a special foreign deposit mobilisation scheme similar to the RBI’s 2013 FCNR(B) swap window.
- However, policymakers have currently rejected a similar scheme due to changing global conditions and associated risks.
Positive Developments
- Recovery in FDI: Despite capital market volatility, FDI flows showed improvement.
- Key trends: February 2026 witnessed net FDI inflows of $4.6 billion, highest level in nearly four years, and following the interim India-US trade agreement.
- Overall FDI position: Net FDI inflows during the first 11 months of 2025-26 reached $6.27 billion, compared to only $959 million in 2024-25. This suggests long-term investor confidence in India’s structural growth story remains intact.
Conclusion
- India’s current economic situation highlights the delicate balance between protecting macroeconomic stability and sustaining growth amid an uncertain global environment.
- While tax reforms may help reduce investment barriers, they alone cannot offset global risk aversion and geopolitical uncertainty.
- A combination of prudent fiscal management, calibrated monetary intervention, structural reforms, and external sector resilience will be essential for India to navigate the present turbulence while preserving long-term investor confidence.
Source: IE
Last updated on May, 2026
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Forex Management FAQs
Q1. How does a high withholding tax affect foreign investment in India’s government bond market?+
Q2. Why is the RBI concerned about the depletion of forex reserves in the current global scenario?+
Q3. What was the significance of the FCNR(B) deposit scheme introduced during the 2013 taper tantrum?+
Q4. How can reducing import dependence contribute to India’s external sector stability?+
Q5. Why are stable FDI inflows considered more beneficial than volatile portfolio investments for India?+
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