Acharya wrote:ldev wrote:
The key is to find a way of monetizing the gold with India's population by working out an iron clad mechanism of guaranteeing the value of the gold such that it can be used to provide the backing for the Indian rupee. This mechanism if it can be fine tuned will ensure (provided ALL of the other prerequisities of a convertible currency and a globally competitive economy are met) that a new paradigm can be established for the future of the Indian rupee.
There is no neeed to monetize the gold directly since it will be manipulated by foriegn interest.
It is better to keep it fudgy and then create some sort of backing of the Indian Rupee based on middle class economy and some gold. It may be less than optimal but it will be less vulnerable for manipulation
To provide a link between gold with Indians and money supply GOI should:
1. Make purchases of gold, tax deductible without any limit.
2. Abolish capital gains tax on gold profits.
3. Provide an ammnesty with no time or amount limits for declaration of black money provided the same is invested in gold.
4. All Indians holding gold will have to declare annually their gold holdings.
5. Purchase for the account of the RBI any amount of gold tendered and pay in rupees at then current market price.
Taken together 1 through 4 should provide a disincentive to not declaring the gold each family has. Further disincentives via a tax or inspection regime can be decided on. The only objective of the exercise being to tie, say MI money supply to Declared Gold.
Whats the advantage of this? Simply that it will impose disclipine on creation of money supply either via deficit spending or via monetization. If Declared Gold is tied to M1 then money creation via the multiplier effect will not be impacted and as such M3 can continue to increase to support additional business/consumer borrowing demand as and when warranted. Similarly when demand wanes and there is a cyclical recession, M3 can be destroyed via the same reverse multiplier mechanism. But there will no permanent increase in the monetary base as is the case under the present fiat currency regime.
Why is this needed now? Because unless India wants to live in perpetuity either under a mismanaged dollar regime or a new yuan regime, the time to begin acting is now.
India is probably the only country in the world which has this unique capability now where domestic gold with citizens can back money supply. In no other major country are the two numbers even close together. In fact if the objective is to back M1, then M1 money supply as of June 5 in the RBI site link given in my last post is the equivalent of $250 billion which is about 25% of the estimated gold holdings in India. As such even if a declaration scheme as outlined in the 4 points above has a success rate of only 25%, the gold linkage can be established for the rupee.
Now, none of this means that ANY of the other variables of a successful economy can be ignored as vina has pointed out in his post.