The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said on Tuesday that it preferred greater amount of long-term and stable flows through foreign direct investment (FDI) into the country rather than often short-term oriented foreign institutional investment (FII) to bridge the current account deficit (CAD) that faces.
The Governor of the central bank D Subbarao said that while inflow of foreign capital was welcome for bridging the CAD, the RBI would always prefer the stable inflows in terms of FDI, which comes with a long term commitment, rather than volatile portfolio inflows which can reverse in case of even a small change in either domestic of global economic scenario.
In fact the RBI had raised the issue in its last two monetary policy reviews as well. The Central bank had expressed concern about the widening of the CAD and the nature of its financing in its third quarter review released on Jan 25. Going by the recent robust export performance though, the CAD for 2010-11 is now estimated to come lower than earlier expected, at around 2.5% of GDP.
No comments:
Post a Comment