At present, FDI inflows are hardly of a kind
that promise a net inflow in the medium term. They are aimed at expanding
the profit repatriation base in firms already controlled by transnationals
or at purchasing shares of the domestic market, rather than increasing
export competitiveness and revenues. That is, direct investment inflows
are of a kind that increase vulnerability. Unfortunately, the same appears
to be true of portfolio inflows among which we must distinguish between
capital flowing in through new issues and that being invested in secondary
markets by foreign institutional investors.
As far as new issues of equity and bonds are
concerned, they reflect the desire of Indian corporate organisations
to mobilise foreign exchange resources, partly because of their need
for foreign currency and partly because interest rates on international
borrowing are competitive even after allowing for the higher costs of
mobilising such finance. This implies that a significant part of the
foreign resources mobilised would be directly spent on imports, and
the rest would join the pool of reserves with the Reserve Bank of India.
Once the resources are mobilised, however, the responsibility of the
unit concerned ends. Any foreign exchange required to finance dividend
repatriation, interest payments, amortisation and payments for shares
sold has to be met by the RBI whenever necessary.
In the case of shares purchased by institutional
investors in the secondary market there is no connection between such
'mobilisation' of foreign exchange and imports. Hence the whole of the
sum involved enters the pool of reserves, but as is true of the primary
market, that reserve has also to meet all payments on account of dividends
or capital repatriation after sale of shares.
These features of the new form of portfolio
finance have two major implications. First, since it is impossible to
link foreign exchange access to foreign exchange earning capacity, there
is a real possibility that expenditure of foreign exchange today may
exceed that warranted by the future ability to pay out foreign exchange,
unless the trend of additional inflows remains more than adequate to
meet these requirements. Second, since a part of the inflow is not directly
linked to imports, mobilisation of finance through these means can lead
to a build up of reserves that strengthens the domestic currency and
undermines export competitiveness, unless of course the underlying process
of growth in the economy raises the demand for imports and exhausts
a part of these reserves.
Thus portfolio inflows can represent a "no-win"
situation if everything else remains constant. If they are used to finance
imports directly, they are encouraging foreign exchange profligacy by
delinking expenditure of foreign currency from the ability to earn it.
On the other hand, if they are not used to finance imports, they result
in an accumulation of reserves, a consequent appreciation of the domestic
currency, a decline in export competitiveness and a worsening of the
current account of the balance of payments. To boot, an increase in
reserves by leading to an increase in money supply reduces the government's
influence over monetary trends and its macroeconomic control through
monetary policy.
One situation in which this need not hold is
when the government resorts to deficit-financed expenditure to boost
growth and uses the excess foreign exchange to meet the import requirements
of that strategy. And such a strategy can prove virtuous if the autonomous
growth in exports that accompanies growth is adequate to meet the service
payments on the implied foreign exchange expenditure. In practice, however,
portfolio capital favours those countries with "stable macroeconomic
policies", which include an unwillingness of the government to
resort to large budgets deficits. Nor is there any guarantee that portfolio
inflows would be coincidentally accompanied by an 'autonomous' export
boom. That is, the preconditions for portfolio inflows to be positive
from the point of view of the balance of payments and growth are either
difficult to realise or entirely fortuitous.
If such conditions are not realised, however,
portfolio flows can in fact prove to be more adverse than commercial
borrowing. This is because the "herd instinct" of banks overexposing
themselves in a few countries is far less irrational than that of atomistic
investors driven by campaigns run by brokerage firms that make a killing
in selling emerging markets. Morgan Stanley, for example, is reported
to have earned a fee of $7 million on Reliance's first Euro-issue. Typically,
commissions earned by these firms on emerging market issues amount to
more than 1 per cent compared to 0.3 or 0.4 per cent for an American
issue. This encourages them to push developing country paper into the
hands of inadequately informed investors. Developing country profligacy
can combine with developed country investor irresponsibility to generate
scenarios similar to the debt crisis. If they do, portfolio flows in
the new liberalised financial environment can prove more "hot"
than short term borrowing. If portfolios are being diversified in favour
of countries like India to hedge against risk, they would turn sharply
against them at the first sign of overexposure. And for a country whose
international credit rating is still below investment-grade, that denouement
need not be far away. That is, the sobering thought that has been ignored
by many Indian observers of the emerging market syndrome is that portfolio
flows in themselves increase external vulnerability rather than resolving
it. Indian road shows that win foreign investor support may be just
as transient as a carnival.