Relevance: GS-3 (Indian Economy – External Sector) | Source: Indian Express

The Indian rupee slipped below the psychologically critical ₹90 per U.S. dollar amid persistent foreign outflows, a widening trade deficit, and weak global sentiment.

Major Causes of the Decline

Cause

Explanation

Foreign portfolio outflows Investors pulled out funds due to global uncertainty and better returns elsewhere.
Rising import bill Higher commodity prices, especially oil and gold, widened the current account gap.
Weak export growth Electronics, engineering goods, and textiles saw slower year-on-year expansion.
Strong U.S. dollar The dollar strengthened globally due to tight U.S. monetary policy.
Limited Reserve Bank of India intervention The Reserve Bank of India allowed market-driven adjustment, favouring a gradual depreciation rather than sharp defence.

Impacts

Positive

Negative

Boosts export competitiveness (if global demand is strong). Costlier imports → higher inflation (oil, electronics, edible oils).
Encourages domestic substitution for imports. Worsens the current account deficit.
May attract tourism and remittances. Raises cost of external borrowing and foreign education.
Supports services exports (Information Technology and Business Process Management). Can trigger further capital outflows if volatility persists.

Q. Which of the following factors can cause a currency to depreciate?

  1. Persistent portfolio outflows
  2. Rising trade deficit
  3. Higher domestic inflation relative to trading partners
  4. Increase in global crude oil prices

Select the correct answer:
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 1, 2 and 3 only
(c) 2, 3 and 4 only
(d) 1, 2, 3 and 4

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