Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Capital Account Convertibility (CAC)

A currency is said to be convertible when it can be freely exchanged for other currency at market rates. Current account transactions are those dealing with payments relating to foreign trade, travel and other services. Capital account deals with transaction of financial assets. While India has made the Indian rupee fully convertible on current account, it is yet to accept capital account convertibility as a goal.
One reason prompting the policy makers to go slow on capital convertibility is the experience of Mexico. It was one of the largest recipients of foreign private capital ($28 billion in 1993). But with the devaluation of the peso, and the collapse of the exchange rate, much of the capital fled country. This catastrophic collapse was made possible by capital account convertibility, which encouraged even Mexican residents to convert their capital into dollars, precipitating the crisis. Similar situation arose in the late 1997 in South East Asian countries also where their local currencies were hammered by speculators leading to devaluation of Indonesian rupiah by almost 58 per cent in one month.
While India make rupee fully convertible under current account, it was felt that the economy was not yet ready for capital account convertibility. The countries which went in for hasty CAC in the 1980s had to face financial crisis. The thinking was that trade and domestic liberation process should be completed before CAC can be thought of. Many economists feel that CAC will only help the drain of Indian capital, which will get invested abroad. The present policy is to go slow on CAC.
There is a school of thought represented by Prof. James Tobin, which even advocated an international tax on financial transaction to prevent speculative flight on capital. After the 1994 Mexico crisis, the idea of a 'Tobin Tax' received fresh attention.

2 comments:

  1. Very interesting post! It was very well authored and easy to understand. In fact after I reading it, I shared it to my friends and they also love it. They get interest in this post. Thank you for this.

    Capital Accounts Collection

    ReplyDelete
  2. Indeed! It is the freedom to convert local financial assets into foreign financial assets and vice versa at market determined rates of exchange. This means that capital account convertibility allows anyone to freely move from local currency into foreign currency and back. Anyway, your article is very interesting and I am looking forward now too see and read another post like this.

    Capital Accounts

    ReplyDelete