Business
Foreign inflows must to put rupee on strong footing
“Investor reluctance to commit to India warrants examination,” chief economic adviser V Anantha Nageswaran wrote in the preface to the survey that laid down measures to attract foreign investment.
The Indian currency has depreciated over 6.5% in the current financial year against the US dollar, ranking it among the worst-performing Asian currencies alongside Japanese yen.
“The rupee’s valuation does not accurately reflect India’s stellar economic fundamentals,” the CEA said.
FPI Outflows at ₹16,500 cr
He listed India’s high growth, moderate inflation, healthy banks and strong corporate balance sheets among others.
India’s economy is expected to grow 7.4% in the current fiscal year and the survey pegged GDP rising next year at 6.8-7.2%.
The survey attributed rupee depreciation to widened balance of payments deficit – $6.4 billion deficit in first half of FY26 compared with a surplus of $23.8 billion in year-ago period – triggered by tepid foreign investment. As of January 13, FPIs were net sellers of Indian equities, with outflows at ₹16,500 crore, the survey noted.
Uncertainty over the trade deal with the US has also contributed to the decline.
“India depends on foreign capital flows to maintain a healthy balance of payments. When they run drier, rupee stability becomes a casualty,” the survey noted.
It waded deeper into “India’s FDI Challenge: Turning success into sustainable growth,” pointing out that “despite a clear government intent… FDI inflows remain below their potential… Proactive reforms are essential for foreign investment.”