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TARAPORE COMMITTEE

      GROUP-8
OBJECTIVES OF THE COMMITTEE
• To review the experience of various measures of capital account
  liberalisation in India
• To examine implications of fuller capital account convertibility on
  monetary and exchange rate management, financial markets and financial
  system
• To study the implications of dollarisation in India of domestic assets and
  liabilities and internationalisation of the Indian rupee
• To provide a comprehensive medium-term operational framework, with
  sequencing and timing, for fuller capital account convertibility taking into
  account the above implications and progress in revenue and fiscal deficit
  of both centre and states
• To survey regulatory framework in countries which have advanced
  towards fuller capital account convertibility
• To suggest appropriate policy measures and prudential safeguards to
  ensure monetary and financial stability
• To make such other recommendations as the Committee may deem
  relevant to the subject.
DEFINITION OF CAC
• CAC refers to the freedom to convert local financial assets into
  foreign financial assets and vice versa. It is associated with
  changes of ownership in foreign/domestic financial assets and
  liabilities and embodies the creation and liquidation of claims
  on, or by, the rest of the world. CAC can be, and is, coexistent
  with restrictions other than on external payments.
TIMELINE
• A five year period is divided into –
  – First phase(2006-07)
  – Second phase(2007-09)
  – Third phase(2009-11)
• A phased approach would let the authorities
  to undertake a stock taking after every phase.
Evaluating the progress after 1997
Recommendations
• Removal of tax benefits to NRIs.
• Greater autonomy to RBI.
• Complete cheek on fiscal deficit.
• Disallowing investment channel led through a particular country (like
  Mauritius).
• Reduction of government stake in banks from 51 per cent to 33 per cent.
• Allowing industrial houses a stake in existing banks or allowing them to
  open a new banks.
• Allowing enhanced presence of foreign banks.
• 10 per cent voting limit for investment in banks should be scrapped.
• Non-resident corporates should be allowed to invest in Indian markets.
• All individual NRIs should also be allowed to invest in Indian Market.
• Revenue deficit of both central and states should be
  eliminated by 2008-09 and building a revenue surplus of 1
  per cent by Financial Year 2011.
• Raising the ceiling on External Commercial Borrowing
  (ECB).
• Banning Participatory Notes (PNs) and phasing out the
  existing PNs within one year.
• Enhancing the ceiling on government debt from $2 billion
  to 10 per cent of issuance and $1-5 billion to 25 per cent of
  new issuances in a year of corporate debt.
• Building adequate reserve and limiting the current account
  deficit to under 3% of GDP.
• All banks should be brought under Companies Act.
• The committee has suggested for providing
  greater financial freedom for all the three key
  stakeholders of this process– resident
  individuals, domestic companies and foreign
  investors.
Need for 2006 Committee
• The Indian macroeconomics situation as also
  the international economy have undergone
  significanct changes since 1997.
• There have been large inflows into India in
  recent years.
Participatory Notes
  Participatory notes or contract notes are the
  financial paper or instruments representing Indian
  shares, issued by foreign financial institutions to
  overseas Investors who are not eligible to invest in
  India.
• Banning of fund inflows under participatory
  notes
Tax Benefit
• The panel suggests that all non resident
  should be treated on equal footing and special
  treatment given to non-resident Indians
  should be done away with.
• It makes a suggestion for the review of double
  taxation treaties.
Benefits and Flip side
• The Assocham, an apex industry body, has called for
  immediate introduction of CAC on the back of strong
  economic fundamentals and buoyant economic condition.
• Overall the committee’s phased approach to CAC appears
  to be cautious and incremental in nature, with measures
  being conditional on the government improving its
  finances, lowering inflation and implementing banking
  sector reforms.
• it helps the Indian companies to access unhindered funds
  from abroad, make it easier for foreign companies to invest
  in India, and it maximises the efficiency in the use of capital
  across the world.
• IMF says that there are important collateral benefits to full
  convertibility in the form of better banks, stronger capital
  markets and more macro economic discipline.
Conclusion
• The report encompasses good, bad and
  unnecessary recommendations. It fails to address
  several issues.
• The panel does not attempt any stress-testing for
  liberalization schemes suggested.
• The countries without capital controls are
  essentially uncorrelated with long term economic
  performance.
• It is widely perceived that convertibility can be a
  boon or a bane and a lot depends on the strength
  of the underlying economy and its institutions.

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Tarapore Committee

  • 2. OBJECTIVES OF THE COMMITTEE • To review the experience of various measures of capital account liberalisation in India • To examine implications of fuller capital account convertibility on monetary and exchange rate management, financial markets and financial system • To study the implications of dollarisation in India of domestic assets and liabilities and internationalisation of the Indian rupee • To provide a comprehensive medium-term operational framework, with sequencing and timing, for fuller capital account convertibility taking into account the above implications and progress in revenue and fiscal deficit of both centre and states • To survey regulatory framework in countries which have advanced towards fuller capital account convertibility • To suggest appropriate policy measures and prudential safeguards to ensure monetary and financial stability • To make such other recommendations as the Committee may deem relevant to the subject.
  • 3. DEFINITION OF CAC • CAC refers to the freedom to convert local financial assets into foreign financial assets and vice versa. It is associated with changes of ownership in foreign/domestic financial assets and liabilities and embodies the creation and liquidation of claims on, or by, the rest of the world. CAC can be, and is, coexistent with restrictions other than on external payments.
  • 4. TIMELINE • A five year period is divided into – – First phase(2006-07) – Second phase(2007-09) – Third phase(2009-11) • A phased approach would let the authorities to undertake a stock taking after every phase.
  • 6. Recommendations • Removal of tax benefits to NRIs. • Greater autonomy to RBI. • Complete cheek on fiscal deficit. • Disallowing investment channel led through a particular country (like Mauritius). • Reduction of government stake in banks from 51 per cent to 33 per cent. • Allowing industrial houses a stake in existing banks or allowing them to open a new banks. • Allowing enhanced presence of foreign banks. • 10 per cent voting limit for investment in banks should be scrapped. • Non-resident corporates should be allowed to invest in Indian markets. • All individual NRIs should also be allowed to invest in Indian Market.
  • 7. • Revenue deficit of both central and states should be eliminated by 2008-09 and building a revenue surplus of 1 per cent by Financial Year 2011. • Raising the ceiling on External Commercial Borrowing (ECB). • Banning Participatory Notes (PNs) and phasing out the existing PNs within one year. • Enhancing the ceiling on government debt from $2 billion to 10 per cent of issuance and $1-5 billion to 25 per cent of new issuances in a year of corporate debt. • Building adequate reserve and limiting the current account deficit to under 3% of GDP. • All banks should be brought under Companies Act.
  • 8. • The committee has suggested for providing greater financial freedom for all the three key stakeholders of this process– resident individuals, domestic companies and foreign investors.
  • 9.
  • 10. Need for 2006 Committee • The Indian macroeconomics situation as also the international economy have undergone significanct changes since 1997. • There have been large inflows into India in recent years.
  • 11. Participatory Notes Participatory notes or contract notes are the financial paper or instruments representing Indian shares, issued by foreign financial institutions to overseas Investors who are not eligible to invest in India. • Banning of fund inflows under participatory notes
  • 12. Tax Benefit • The panel suggests that all non resident should be treated on equal footing and special treatment given to non-resident Indians should be done away with. • It makes a suggestion for the review of double taxation treaties.
  • 13. Benefits and Flip side • The Assocham, an apex industry body, has called for immediate introduction of CAC on the back of strong economic fundamentals and buoyant economic condition. • Overall the committee’s phased approach to CAC appears to be cautious and incremental in nature, with measures being conditional on the government improving its finances, lowering inflation and implementing banking sector reforms. • it helps the Indian companies to access unhindered funds from abroad, make it easier for foreign companies to invest in India, and it maximises the efficiency in the use of capital across the world. • IMF says that there are important collateral benefits to full convertibility in the form of better banks, stronger capital markets and more macro economic discipline.
  • 14.
  • 15.
  • 16. Conclusion • The report encompasses good, bad and unnecessary recommendations. It fails to address several issues. • The panel does not attempt any stress-testing for liberalization schemes suggested. • The countries without capital controls are essentially uncorrelated with long term economic performance. • It is widely perceived that convertibility can be a boon or a bane and a lot depends on the strength of the underlying economy and its institutions.