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HomeEconomyIndia may become surprise victim of US-China trade war, Rabobank says

India may become surprise victim of US-China trade war, Rabobank says

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India’s relations with the US and China could unwittingly see New Delhi being forced to take sides and get caught in an economic mess. 

India’s economy will be hit hard by a combination of a global tariff war and the U.S. Federal Reserve’s monetary tightening cycle, according to a study by economists at Rabobank International.

A tariff war will reduce exports and lead to imported inflation, which will hurt Indian purchasing power and investments, according to the Rabobank study. That could mean as much as 2.3 percent of missed GDP growth for India by 2022.

“Many countries could end up being caught in the middle,” economists Hugo Erken, Raphie Hayat and Marijn Heijmerikx wrote about the current trade spat between the U.S. and China. “India could fall victim to adverse trade policies” of the U.S. or China or both.

They cite three possible scenarios how this could happen:

  1. China targets Indian exports because the nation is regarded to be an American ally
  2. India chooses not to side with the Donald Trump administration and the U.S. has a go at Indian exports
  3. India retaliates against the U.S.

The last scenario is likely to cost the Indian economy the most, they wrote.

This goes against the argument that India is relatively insulated from a trade war, given its low share of total world exports of just 1.7 percent. President Donald Trump has threatened tariffs on $150 billion of Chinese imports in retaliation for alleged violations of intellectual property rights, while Beijing has vowed to retaliate on everything from American soybeans to planes.

Besides a possible trade war, a faster-than-expected tightening of U.S. monetary policy will lead to capital outflows. Rabobank’s models estimate India losing $22 billion in capital flows by 2022, with the scenario getting complicated further, in case political instability hits India. The South Asian nation heads into a national election early next year.

In such an event, the Rabobank model sees the rupee depreciating sharply and the missed capital flows will amount to $32 billion by 2022, they wrote.

“If India uses its foreign reserves in such a case, interest rates could rise sharply as liquidity decreases,” they wrote, adding that even though India’s reserves are substantial, markets might still become concerned about the prospects of further declines. “All in all, these developments will create major speed bumps on India’s road to economic prosperity.”

-Bloomberg

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