It really
is a no-brainer. India is grappling with a current account deficit (CAD) of $80 billion that is exerting tremendous pressure on the rupee.
(i) Controlling imports and (ii) reducing the trade balance
are obviously one of the key strategies for reining in the CAD.
Crude oil is the largest component of India’s
import bill, accounting for a third
of the total. Any attempt to control the CAD should obviously start with reducing the crude oil import
bill.
Iran, which is stifled by U.S.
financial sanctions, is willing to
sell oil to India in exchange for payment in rupees. What should the
government do? Grab the offer, obviously. Yet, buckling to unfair pressure from the U.S., the government has been cutting down on imports from Iran over the past
three years.
As India
fell in line with U.S. sanctions, it reduced
its oil imports from Iran from 21.2 million tonnes in 2009-10 to 13.2 million
tonnes in 2012-13. In the first
five months of this fiscal, the country imported just two million tonnes of crude oil from Iran.
However,
the time has now come for India to unhitch
itself from the American bandwagon and step up crude imports from Iran in its
own interests.
According to a proposal the Petroleum Ministry has sent to the
Prime Minister, the country’s dollar payments for its oil imports can be brought down by $8.5 billion (almost 10
per cent of the CAD) if it imports as much oil from Iran as it did in
2012-13, which is another 11 million tonnes.
This
newspaper argued even at the time of imposition
of sanctions on Iran that succumbing
to U.S. pressure would not be in India’s interests.
With Iran offering the comfort of rupee
payments through a bank account with an Indian bank in Kolkata,
India
should now push the advantage and
maximise its oil purchases from that country.
Such a move
will ease the pressure not just on the
current account but also in the forex market as the oil companies will be
buying that many dollars less.
Oil companies are big buyers of dollars and have
the potential to influence the forex
market.
Meanwhile,
the government’s announcement that fuel
conservation measures will be announced soon has raised expectations
and anxieties equally.
Ideas such
as the one to close petrol bunks at
night are not just bad but foolish, and Petroleum Minister Veerappa Moily’s
suggestion to that effect caused
considerable confusion before he clarified the position on Monday.
The best way to conserve fuel is to raise prices to market levels,
which will hopefully push users to
economise on consumption. T
he downside
though is that it will have an adverse
impact on inflation. Clearly, the choices are not easy but the
government should keep in mind the interests of the common man while framing
its strategy for fuel conservation.
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