By Arjun
Parthasarathy, Investors are Idiots.com
The Indian real
estate sector is largely dominated by the politician-builder nexus that
predominantly deal in black money.
Notes in circulation
is a statistic released by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) every week. The
notes in circulation is nothing but the rupee held as cash by the general
public (individuals and institutions). The cash held by the general public stands
at Rs. 13.276 lakh crore as of 18 April 2014. In other words, Rs. 13.276 lakh
is out of the banking system and held in the form of cash.
The notes in
circulation stood at Rs. 7.04 lakh crore as of 17 April 2009 and this has gone
up by Rs. 6.236 lakh crore over the last 5 years. The leakage out of the
banking system is Rs. 6.236 lakh crore since April 2009.
Mr.Arjun Parthasarathy,
Investors are Idiots.com
The Rs. 6.236 lakh
crore of leakage out of the banking system is a big headache for the RBI. The
banking system has been short of liquidity for the past 4 years and has been
borrowing from the RBI on a daily basis to fund its daily liquidity
requirements. Banks have been borrowing anywhere between Rs. 50,000 crore to
Rs. 2 lakh crore on a daily basis over the last 4 years.
A liquidity deficit
in the banking system hits credit growth as banks have less funds to lend to
the economy. It also hits the government’s borrowing programme as banks have
less funds to invest in government bonds. The funds crunch will also increase
the interest rates.
The RBI has been
trying to ease the liquidity shortage by lowering CRR, buying bonds through
open market operations (to infuse liquidity the RBI buys bonds through such
OMOs) and by encouraging banks to garner FCNR B deposits.
The RBI has reduced
CRR by 2% points from 6% to 4%, adding over Rs. 1 lakh crore into the system.
The RBI has bought bonds through OMOs for Rs 4.8 lakh crore over the last five
years. The central bank also opened a swap window for FCNR B (foreign currency
non-resident B) deposits for banks that garnered $ 3,400 Crore, adding Rs. 2
lakh crore into the system.
The RBI has injected
Rs. 7.8 lakh crore into the banking system through CRR, OMO and FCNR B swaps,
apart from the daily injection of funds through repos, term repos and marginal
standing facility (MSF) of any where between Rs. 50,000 crore to Rs. 2 lakh
crore.
The MSF is the RBI
window, where banks can access funds once they hit the limit from the daily
repo window. The interest rate at the MSF window is 1% higher than the repo
rate. While daily repo is for one day, term repo auctions are conducted for
seven and 14 days.
The heavy liquidity
injection by the RBI is inflationary in nature as it is addition of primary
liquidity into the system. OMOs are also seen as back door deficit financing by
the RBI, which is again inflationary in nature. The CPI (consumer price inflation
or retail inflation) has been averaging over 9 percent levels over the last
five years largely due to government borrowing and spending.
The government’s
stock of outstanding debt has gone by Rs. 24 lakh crore over the last six
years. The stock of debt has tripled since 2008-09.
The RBI needs to curb
the money going out of the system as it leads to actions that have long-term
negative repercussions as mentioned above.
Why is there such a
high level of currency leakage?
Inflation is one big
cause of currency leakage as rising prices of goods and services in an economy
that is still largely cash driven leads to higher demand for holding cash.
The next big reason
is the property bubble that has seen value of real estate rise multi-fold
despite economic growth slowing down from levels of 8.4 percent seen in 2010-11
to below 5 % levels as of 2013-14. The real estate sector is largely dominated
by the politician-builder nexus that predominantly deal in black money. Money
goes out of the banking system to the real estate sector and stays there as
black money.
The RBI needs to
control inflation and also keep the real estate market in check to stem the
currency leakage from the system. Hopefully both inflation and property prices
will cool down going forward as the RBI keeps policy on hold and prevent banks
from excessive lending to the real estate sector.
Mr. Arjun
Parthasarathy is the founder of Investors are Idiots.com and INRBONDS.com.
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