April 19, 2024

India’s New Central Bank Leader May Have a Short Honeymoon

This may not last long.

Mr. Rajan, 50, took charge on Wednesday of the Reserve Bank of India, which has tried and failed to stop the steep decline of the rupee against the dollar. India’s chronic inflation is almost certain to move higher in the coming months, given the country’s heavy dependence on imported oil priced in dollars. The stock market is plunging as economic activity slows by the day.

Yet unlike Ben S. Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve, Mr. Rajan has very little political independence in his new job. Some of the biggest problems bedeviling the Indian economy are beyond his control, like the trade and government budget deficits and the crippling shortage of roads and other infrastructure.

All of his policy options carry big risks that could antagonize large sectors of the public, who will soon forget the rapturous accounts of his athleticism and charm.

“Any entrant to the central bank governorship probably starts at the height of their popularity,” Mr. Rajan said at a news conference early Wednesday evening. “Some of the actions I take will not be popular. The governorship of the central bank is not meant to win one votes or Facebook ‘likes.’ ”

Mr. Rajan, a University of Chicago finance professor, used his initial news conference to announce a long list of financial deregulatory measures that he plans in the coming weeks and months. These included issuing more licenses for new banks, making it easier for banks to open branches across the country and gradually lowering the percentage of assets that banks must hold in government securities – three steps aimed at increasing competition in India’s banking sector, long seen by critics as a clubby, cautious industry reluctant to lend to small and medium-size businesses or farmers.

The most immediate question facing Mr. Rajan, a former chief economist for the International Monetary Fund whose most recent job has been as chief economic adviser to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, lies in how to halt the fall of the rupee. He said nothing on Wednesday evening about monetary policy, deferring the subject to a statement to be issued on Sept. 20.

Currency market intervention by the Reserve Bank has helped limit the rupee’s losses this week, and it even gained 0.94 percent on Wednesday, to 67.09 to the dollar. But the rupee’s slide through the summer and its continued weakness has fostered speculation in financial markets that Mr. Rajan might raise short-term interest rates in his first week in office.

A sliding currency pushes up inflation. An inflation-fighting central banker could raise interest rates. Higher rates would make investment in India more attractive to foreign and domestic money managers who have been hustling to move money out of the country. It could help curb inflation, already approaching 10 percent even before the full effect of rising import prices is felt in the coming weeks.

But with the economy already growing at its slowest pace since the worst of the global financial crisis in early 2009, India’s business establishment is fiercely opposed to any increases in interest rates. The Confederation of Indian Industry, the country’s most prominent business coalition, reiterated on Tuesday its call for the Reserve Bank of India to cut short-term interest rates by a full percentage point.

“The last thing you want is to choke off any hope of growth by raising” the benchmark interest rate, said Omkar Goswami, the chairman of CERG Advisory, a consulting firm based in Delhi, and an independent director of Indian companies like Infosys, a big outsourcing company, and IDFC, a financial conglomerate.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/05/business/global/indias-new-central-bank-leader-may-have-a-short-honeymoon.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

West’s Economic Slump Catching Up With Asia

HONG KONG — Asia’s resistance to the West’s economic troubles is slowly wearing thin.

For much of this year, the economies of the Asia-Pacific region appeared to be blissfully isolated from the turmoil in other parts of the world. Asian stock markets fell along with those in the West, but the region’s economies continued to power ahead.

Within the past few weeks, however, cracks have emerged in the region’s mighty economies, and analysts and policy makers have become more concerned about the painful disruption that could spill into Asia as the situation in Europe continues to deteriorate and the United States struggles to pick up speed.

“The potential risks for Asia have increased” as the European crisis has moved beyond small peripheral economies like Greece, enveloping larger countries like Italy, Spain and even France, said Frederic Neumann, co-head of Asian economics at HSBC in Hong Kong. “It’s a whole different ball game now.”

The spreading economic troubles were underscored Wednesday when a closely watched gauge showed that Chinese manufacturing was contracting. The reading, published by HSBC, dropped from 51 in October to 48 in November, the lowest level in nearly three years and much lower than economists had expected. A reading of 50 is the dividing line between expansion and contraction.

The steep decline fanned worries about the spillover of the West’s problems into Asia. But it also reinforced nervousness about the effect in the opposite direction: the West increasingly needs a strong Asia to buy its goods as consumers at home stay on the sidelines.

The concern is that things are going to get worse before they get better.

“Europe is only at the beginning of its crisis,” said Pranay Gupta, chief investment officer for the Asia-Pacific region at ING Investment Management in Hong Kong. “Europe is now where the United States was three years ago: The economic contraction is only just beginning.”

So far, the economic pain in Asia has been relatively muted, and much of the region remains on course for growth rates that most Western nations can only dream of.

The Chinese economy is set to expand 9.5 percent this year, according to projections from the International Monetary Fund
last month. India is expected to grow 7.8 percent, Indonesia 6.4 percent, and many other Southeast Asian nations more than 5 percent, the I.M.F. estimates.

Those figures, however, are generally below the growth rates seen in 2010, and are likely to ease off further next year, the I.M.F. and most economists say.

Exports from Asia have been softening for months as demand in Europe, in particular, has slowed. Although many countries depend less on exports than they once did, the sector remains crucial for economies like those of Taiwan and South Korea and for the small, open economies of Hong Kong and Singapore, economists say.

Reacting to the worsening global environment, Indonesia and Australia have lowered interest rates in recent weeks. Most other central banks in the region have put off rate increases that seemed likely only months ago as they have become less concerned about inflation and more worried about growth.

In Japan, the pain has been compounded by the results of the devastating earthquake and tsunami of last March and by the persistent strength of the yen. Fanned by the economic difficulties in other parts of the world, the Japanese currency’s rise has made Japanese goods more expensive for shoppers abroad and has helped dent exporters’ profits.

With no room to lower already-low interest rates further, the government has resorted to direct intervention in the currency markets — selling yen for U.S. dollars — four times in little more than a year in its battle to weaken the yen.

In the financial sector, meanwhile, banks like HSBC, UBS and Nomura are cutting jobs around the globe. And although many would like to grow, rather than shrink, in the Asia-Pacific region, financial centers like Hong Kong and Singapore have not escaped the hiring freezes and job cuts.

“There are still pockets of hiring in the Asian financial sector, but it has got a lot tougher in recent months,” said Matthew Bennett, managing director at the recruitment firm Robert Walters in Hong Kong.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/24/business/global/wests-economic-slump-catching-up-with-asia.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Housing Starts Increase, While Jobless Claims Slip

WASHINGTON (Reuters) — Housing starts in the United States rose more than expected and permits for future construction touched a five-month high in May, a government report showed on Thursday, but any recovery will be hampered by a glut of pre-owned homes, economists warned.

The Commerce Department said housing starts rose 3.5 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 560,000 units, retracing almost half of April’s steep decline. April’s starts were revised up to a 541,000 unit pace, which was previously reported as a 523,000 unit rate.

Compared to May last year, residential construction was down 3.4 percent.

An oversupply of previously owned houses, especially foreclosed properties which sell well below their value, is dampening new home construction. A survey on Wednesday showed sentiment among home builders at its lowest in nine months in June.

Last month, there was an increase in groundbreaking for both multi- and single-family homes. Starts in Western states were the highest since August.

Multifamily home starts rose 2.9 percent. The increase in the construction of multifamily units reflects a growing demand for rentals as relentless declines in house prices encourage Americans to delay home purchases and even give up properties whose mortgages are far higher than their values.

Single-family home construction, which accounts for a large portion of the market, rose 3.7 percent.

The government also reported Thursday that new applications for jobless benefits dipped in the latest week but remained at levels too high to put a dent in the unemployment rate.

The Labor Department said new jobless claims fell to 414,000 last week from an upwardly revised 430,000 in the prior week.

Claims have been above 400,000 for two months, reflecting a rough patch in the recovery that has led to renewed weakness in an already anemic job market.

Continuing claims eased to 3.68 million from 3.70 million in the week ended June 4, the most recent data available, while the total number of recipients on benefits rolls, including those receiving emergency benefits under a Congressional extension, remained at 7.4 million in the week ended May 28, down about 200,000 from a week earlier.

The economy produced just 54,000 new jobs in May and the unemployment rate rose to 9.1 percent from 9.0 percent.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=cefacc7707e7e498d9b3283e600f6618