Inflation means an increase in available
currency, and is manifested by a general increase in prices. In the nineteenth
century, economists and employers put forward an argument that prices are
determined by wages and salaries, so that every wage or salary increase causes
a price increase. However, income levels influence currencies through consumer
spending. When incomes increase, people spend more. Higher demand for imported
goods increases demand for foreign currencies and, thus, weakens the Rupee. All
governments have held the workers responsible for price increases, and urged
them to moderate their wage claims if they want inflation to be curbed. The
price for which the worker sells his labour power; so that when prices rise
generally due to inflation, wages go up just like other prices.
Currency
is printed year-round to meet both for increasing demand for more bills and to
replace those that wear out and are pulled from circulation. Inflation
is the result of the action of governments printing and putting into
circulation a continuous stream of thousands crores (ten Arabs or ten Billions)
of notes and notes of larger denominations, i.e. an excess issue of currency.
It is this action which causes an inflationary rise of prices and it is governments,
who carry sole responsibility - they and nobody else. The Indian Rupee was
pegged to the British sterling from 1926 to 1966 at INR 12.33 to 1 Pound. The
peg was changed to the US Dollar in 1966 at INR 7.8 to 1 USD. It may be noted
that the exchange rate in 1948 was at INR 3.30 to 1 USD and between 1950 and
1966 it was steady at INR 4.76. Immediately after Pakistan war with India in
1965 the exchange rate doubled and went up to INR 7.50 to 1 USD. It moved to
INR 8.39 to 1 USD in 1975 and kept on increasing. In 2011 (April) it was INR
44.17 to 1 USD and it continues to rise unabatedly. In 2015 (27 Sep) it was INR
66.16 to 1 USD. Governments have pursued this policy of inflation for more than
three decades in the absurd belief that it would prevent unemployment.
The value of a country’s currency is linked
with its economic conditions and policies. Apart from inflation, the volatility
in the foreign exchange rates between two countries depends upon numerous
macro-economic factors that have different degrees of importance to different
economies of the world. Some special and exceptional factors affecting the
rates may also exist in the case of different countries. Following are shown
the common factors on which the foreign exchange rate depends: (a) flow of
imports and exports between the countries; (b) flow of capital between the
countries; (c) fluctuation limits on exchange rate imposed by the governments
of the countries; (d) merchandise trade balance; (e) rate of inflation in the
country; (f) flow of funds between the economies for the payment of stock and
bond purchases; (g) relative growth rate; (h) employment (i) short term and
long term interest rate differentials;
(j) performance of equity markets; (k) foreign exchange reserves; (l)
price of agricultural products (which depended on climate) and other commodity
prices and (m) cost of borrowings.
The US and European economy was affected by
the Great Recession of 2007-08, “a period of reduced economic activity with
negative GDP growth.” However, Poland, Slovakia, Moldova, India, China, South
Korea, Indonesia, Australia, Uruguay, Colombia and Bolivia escaped a recession
during that period. In the U.S., persistent unemployment remained, along with low
confidence, the continuing decline in home values and increase in foreclosures and
an increasing federal debt inflation and rising petroleum and food prices. The
economic inequality made the rich the richer and the poor the poorer. The wealth
concentrated at the top level while the poor were burdened with debts and they struggled
to maintain their living standards.
I am of
the opinion that in order to tide over the calamity, the governments are
justified in printing notes / dollars to finance rural employment programmes,
to provide free education, free medicine
/ hospitalization, to improve the country’s infrastructure with the building of
national highways, broadening and lengthening railways and big ports for
shipping, airports and develop renewed energy.
Did the US government’s printed dollar notes and
circulated it among the lower income group to tide over the recession in 2007-08?
People are aware of it.
The people around the world had faith in the
dollar currency and they too shared the brunt of US recession. If the US
government continues the same gimmick, it is only a matter of time before
people lose faith in the US Dollar, leading to a domino effect in the economy.
Excerpts from
NEED OF THE HOUR
by
Joseph J. Thayamkeril
Lawyer, Kochi, Kerala, India.
josephjthayamkeril.blogspot.com
josephjthayamkeril@gmail.com
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