India Pushes To Expand Rupee Settlement With Key Trade Partners

India Pushes To Expand Rupee Settlement With Key Trade Partners

India Pushes To Expand Rupee Settlement With Key Trade Partners

India’s central bank is taking active steps to allow free-trade partners to settle transactions with it more easily in the rupee, a move that could help boost the local currency over time. Initial steps include establishing direct rupee rates that don’t rely on a third currency, such as the US dollar, for cross-reference.

Background and Context

The move is part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s effort to push greater use of the rupee in international transactions, mirroring similar efforts by China and other regional peers. Greater local currency use lowers risks and costs for companies, reduces the need for holding higher foreign exchange reserves and makes the economy less vulnerable to external shocks.

India sees having a credible international currency as vital to its goal of becoming a “developed nation” by 2047. The International Monetary Fund expects the South Asian nation to surpass Japan as the world’s fourth-largest economy this year and overtake Germany to rank third by 2027-28.

Multi-Currency Regime

India also views a multi-currency regime as a stable and desirable option for global trade settlements. The Reserve Bank of India said it will establish reference rates for the UAE’s dirham and Indonesia’s rupiah, adding to existing links with the US dollar, Japanese yen, euro, and British pound.

The central bank is also actively developing reference rates for its neighbours and Mauritius. For more information on Indian economy, visit our website.

Free-Trade Agreements

India has free-trade agreements with more than a dozen countries and blocs, including deals signed with the UK, Australia, and the UAE in recent years. The country is also negotiating similar agreements with the US, the EU, Peru, Oman, and New Zealand, among others.

In addition, India has six preferential trade agreements, while members of the European Free Trade Association — Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland — and India signed a comprehensive Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement in March 2024.

India is actively discussing rupee invoicing in all such negotiations. To learn more about free trade agreements, click here.

De-Dollarisation

It’s a difficult balancing act as New Delhi wants to avoid having the moves seen as a push for de-dollarisation. US President Donald Trump has repeatedly attacked the BRICS grouping of nations, accusing it of trying to develop a common currency to undermine the dollar.

India has denied any such intent. “The focus of authorities is on internationalisation of the rupee by increasing its usability for trade and capital transactions among neighbouring countries,” said Gaura Sen Gupta, chief economist at IDFC FIRST Bank.

For more information on de-dollarisation, visit our website. To learn more about internationalisation of the rupee, click here.

Global Payment Currencies

India currently doesn’t feature among the top 20 global payment currencies, according to the latest Swift data. The dollar leads with a 46.94% share, while emerging market currencies such as the Mexican peso, Thai baht and Malaysian ringgit are all in the top 20.

India first articulated its ambition of popularising rupee use outside its territory three years ago. A central bank report on the rupee’s internationalisation, made public in 2023, included expanding currency swap arrangements and bilateral trade agreements, leveraging the Asian Clearing Union for regional settlements and integrating Indian payments with other countries as short-term goals.

For more information on global payment currencies, visit our website. To learn more about rupee internationalisation, click here.

Sreenivasulu Malkari

💻 Freelance Trading Tech Specialist | 15+ yrs in markets Expert in algo trading, automation & psychology-driven strategies 📈 Empowering traders with smart, affordable tools

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