Economics ยท Chapter 10

๐ŸŒ International Trade & Foreign Exchange

Exports, imports, BOP, WTO, rupee, forex reserves.

๐ŸŒ India in the World Economy

International Trade is the exchange of goods, services, and capital across national boundaries. Nations trade because no country can produce everything efficiently โ€” it's based on Comparative Advantage (David Ricardo).

Balance of Payments (BOP): Record of all economic transactions between India and the rest of the world in a year.
โ€ข Current Account โ€” trade in goods (Merchandise/Trade Balance) + services + investment income + transfers
โ€ข Capital Account โ€” FDI, FII, loans, external borrowings
โ€ข Current Account Deficit (CAD) โ€” India spends more on imports than earns from exports. India typically has CAD due to high oil imports.

India's trade (2023-24):
โ€ข Exports: ~$776 billion (goods + services)
โ€ข Imports: ~$856 billion
โ€ข Top exports: IT/software, gems and jewellery, petroleum products, machinery, pharma
โ€ข Top imports: Crude oil, gold, electronics, machinery, coal

๐Ÿ’ฑ Foreign Exchange โ€” Rupee and Dollar

Exchange rate is the price of one currency in terms of another. 1 USD โ‰ˆ Rs 83-84 (2024).
Factors affecting Rupee value:
โ€ข Weakens rupee: High import demand (especially oil), high inflation, CAD widening, FII outflows, strong dollar
โ€ข Strengthens rupee: High exports, FDI inflows, RBI intervention, strong fundamentals
India's forex reserves (2024): ~$650 billion โ€” 4th largest in the world
RBI manages exchange rate through intervention (buys/sells dollars)

Mumbai Port โ€” one of India's largest sea trade gateways
Mumbai Port โ€” one of India's largest sea trade gatewaysWikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0
WTO headquarters, Geneva โ€” governs international trade rules
WTO headquarters, Geneva โ€” governs international trade rulesWikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0
๐ŸŒ WTO โ€” World Trade Organization

โ€ข Established: January 1, 1995 (replaced GATT)
โ€ข HQ: Geneva, Switzerland
โ€ข Members: 164 countries
โ€ข Purpose: Regulate international trade, reduce trade barriers, resolve disputes
โ€ข India and WTO: India is a founding member. Sometimes clashes with developed countries on agricultural subsidies, patent rights (TRIPS Agreement โ€” generic medicines issue).
โ€ข Doha Round (2001) โ€” still incomplete. India blocked agreement on food stockholding for food security.

๐ŸŽฌ

India's Trade Balance

Animation
INDIA TRADE AND FOREX โ€” CLICK TO EXPLORE EXPORTS (What India sells) FY2023-24: ~$778 billion 1. IT/Software: $247B 2. Petroleum products: $82B 3. Gems and Jewellery: $35B 4. Pharmaceuticals: $25B 5. Machinery: $20B Top destinations: USA, UAE, China TRADE DEFICIT ~$78B (goods) Offset by services surplus + remittances โฌ…๏ธโฌ…๏ธ Gap = Deficit IMPORTS (What India buys) FY2023-24: ~$857 billion 1. Crude Oil: $233B 2. Electronics: $85B 3. Gold: $46B 4. Machinery: $42B 5. Coal: $26B Top sources: China, UAE, USA BALANCE OF PAYMENTS = Current Account + Capital Account CAD (Current Account Deficit) offset by FDI, FII, NRI remittances in Capital Account FOREX RESERVES ~$650 billion (2024) 4th largest in world. Covers 12 months of imports. RUPEE (INR) 1 USD = Rs 83-84 (2024) Partially convertible. Managed float by RBI. CLICK ANY BOX India is the world's 7th largest merchandise exporter and 6th largest importer.

Crude oil = India's biggest import vulnerability. IT services = India's biggest export strength.

๐Ÿ’น

Trade Concepts Explorer

Interactive
Full nameWorld Trade Organization
EstablishedJanuary 1, 1995 โ€” replaced GATT (1947)
HQGeneva, Switzerland
Members164 countries
PurposeRegulate trade, reduce barriers, settle disputes
Practice (SSC/Banking): What is the impact of rupee depreciation on India's economy?
Rupee depreciation means the value of the Indian rupee falls relative to other currencies (e.g., 1 USD now buys Rs 84 instead of Rs 80 โ€” rupee has depreciated).

Effects on India:

Negative effects:
โ€ข Imports become costlier โ€” oil (India imports $233B/year) becomes more expensive in rupee terms โ†’ inflation rises
โ€ข Inflation โ€” import cost-push inflation on fuel, electronics, medicines
โ€ข External debt burden โ€” dollar-denominated loans require more rupees to repay
โ€ข FII outflows โ€” foreign investors withdraw from Indian markets to avoid currency losses

Positive effects:
โ€ข Exports become competitive โ€” Indian goods cheaper in dollar terms โ†’ more demand for Indian exports
โ€ข IT services benefit โ€” Indian IT companies earn in dollars, pay costs in rupees โ†’ higher rupee profits
โ€ข Remittances increase โ€” NRIs send more money as they get more rupees per dollar
โ€ข Tourism revenue increases โ€” India cheaper for foreign tourists

Overall: For India, gradual depreciation is manageable, but sharp depreciation (like Pakistan, Sri Lanka) causes serious economic crisis.
Practice (SSC): What is the difference between Balance of Trade and Balance of Payments?
Balance of Trade (BOT):
โ€ข Records only the trade in physical goods (merchandise)
โ€ข BOT = Exports of goods - Imports of goods
โ€ข Narrow measure
โ€ข India 2023-24: goods exports ~$437B, goods imports ~$677B โ†’ Trade deficit of ~$240B

Balance of Payments (BOP):
โ€ข Records ALL economic transactions between India and the world
โ€ข Broader measure โ€” includes goods, services, income, transfers, capital flows
โ€ข Components:
- Current Account: Goods + Services + Primary income + Secondary income (remittances)
- Capital and Financial Account: FDI + FII + Loans + Reserves
โ€ข BOP must always balance โ€” deficit in one account offset by surplus in another
โ€ข India 2023-24: Current Account Deficit ~2% of GDP (services surplus + remittances partially offset goods deficit)

Key relationships:
โ€ข BOT is a subset of BOP Current Account
โ€ข India runs BOT deficit (goods) but services surplus (IT)
โ€ข India receives world's highest remittances (~$125B in 2023) which help fund CAD
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