Page 211 - DECO201_MACRO_ECONOMICS_ENGLISH
P. 211

Macro Economics




                    Notes          Exchange Control

                                   Exchange control refers to government regulation of exchange rate as well as restriction on the
                                   conversion of local currency into foreign currency. Under this system, all exporters are asked to
                                   surrender their foreign exchanges to the central bank. Then foreign exchanges are rationed out
                                   to licensed importers. The aim of exchange control is to bring about an equality between the
                                   demand for and the supply of foreign exchange through state intervention and control.

                                   Direct Controls

                                   Direct controls take the form of exchange control, capital control and commodity control. Imports
                                   and exports can be directly controlled by various measures.

                                   Devaluation

                                   The home  currency may  be deliberately deflated. In  that case,  prices will come down and
                                   exports would be promoted and imports restricted.
                                   Import Restriction and Export Promotion


                                   Imports may be restricted by tariff, quotas, duties, licenses and so on. Exports may be promoted
                                   by giving bounties, incentives, tax concessions,  advertisement and  publicity, cost reduction,
                                   quality improvement and the like.
                                   However, every one of the above methods has its own limitations.


                                          Example: Deflation is dangerous, depreciation is temporary and retaliatory, devaluation
                                   is inflationary and exchange control is difficult to administer. Therefore, sometimes it is said
                                   that it is easy to control output and employment, but harder to control balance of payments.

                                   Self Assessment

                                   Fill in the blanks:
                                   6.  If MPS = ...................................., then increase in imports will be equal to increase in exports.
                                   7.  .............................. means an official reduction in the external value of a currency vis-à-vis
                                       gold or other currencies.
                                   8.  ............................... refers to government regulation of exchange rate as well as restriction
                                       on the conversion of local currency into foreign currency.
                                   9.  Under .................................... , the exchange rate was fixed in terms of dollar or gold.
                                   10.  ...................................... in income may lead to more imports and less exports.

                                   12.3 India’s Balance of Payments

                                   Prior to 1956-57, for most years in the fifties, India had a current account surplus. But the position
                                   changed in 1956-57, when India faced BOP crisis. The trade deficit increased from 3.8 per cent of
                                   GDP at market prices to 4.5 per cent.

                                   The BOP position deteriorated once again in 1966-67. In 1965, the United States suspended its
                                   aid in  response to  Indo-Pakistan war and later refused of renew the PL 480 agreement on a





          206                               LOVELY PROFESSIONAL UNIVERSITY
   206   207   208   209   210   211   212   213   214   215   216