SBI Urges Structural Measures to Tackle Rupee Depreciation, Inflation, BoP Deficit

The State Bank of India has called for comprehensive structural measures to manage risks from rupee depreciation, imported inflation, and a widening balance of payments deficit. The report warns of second-round effects where higher import costs fuel broader inflation and unanchor expectations. It highlights a 6.39% rupee depreciation since April 2025 and cumulative FII outflows of USD 6.4 billion. The BoP is projected to remain in deficit for a third consecutive year in FY27, requiring urgent policy action beyond exchange rate adjustments.

Key Points: SBI Calls for Action on Rupee Fall, Inflation, BoP Deficit

  • Rupee depreciated 6.39% between April 2025 and February 2026
  • Cumulative FII outflows of USD 6.4 billion add currency pressure
  • Second-round effects risk unanchoring inflation expectations
  • India's BoP projected at USD 28 billion deficit in FY27
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SBI calls for structural measures to manage rupee depreciation, inflation risks and BoP deficit

SBI report urges structural policy response to manage rupee depreciation, imported inflation, and widening balance of payments deficit, warning of second-round effects.

"The current Rupee depreciation is not in line with India's macro fundamentals! It is therefore imperative to control the second-round effects... - SBI Report"

New Delhi, April 29

India needs a comprehensive and structural policy response to manage rising risks from rupee depreciation, imported inflation and a widening balance of payments deficit, according to a report by the State Bank of India.

The report highlighted that the key concern at present is the "second-round effect" of external shocks, particularly through the exchange rate channel. It noted that depreciation in the rupee leads to higher imported inflation, while continued capital outflows further put pressure on the currency.

It stated, "The current Rupee depreciation is not in line with India's macro fundamentals! It is therefore imperative to control the second-round effects... hence ensuring that inflationary expectations does not get de anchored..we need a structural solution to India's BOP deficit".

Second-round effects refer to the indirect impact of an initial economic shock spreading through the wider economy. In this context, a depreciation of the rupee increases the cost of imports like oil and raw materials (first-round effect). Over time, businesses pass on these higher costs to consumers, leading to a broader rise in prices and inflation (second-round effect). This can also push up inflation expectations, making it harder for policymakers to control price stability.

Data in the report showed that the rupee has depreciated 6.39 per cent between April 2025 and February 2026, with an additional 3.63 per cent depreciation observed post the West Asia conflict. At the same time, cumulative foreign institutional investor (FII) outflows of USD 6.4 billion have added to pressure on the currency.

The report cautioned that exchange rate depreciation cannot act as a shock absorber indefinitely. Instead, it may turn into a channel for transmitting inflation into the domestic economy, especially through higher import costs.

This could lead to inflation expectations becoming unanchored, thereby complicating monetary policy.

On the external sector, the report projected that India's overall balance of payments could remain in deficit in FY27 at USD 28 billion, with the trade balance also expected to stay negative. The current account deficit is projected at USD 54.1 billion in FY27, compared with USD 31.5 billion in FY26.

Although the capital account is expected to show a surplus of USD 26.5 billion, supported by positive capital flows, it may not be sufficient to fully offset the current account gap.

The report also warned that the BoP could remain negative for the third consecutive year, underlining the need for urgent policy action.

It stressed that relying solely on exchange rate movements is not a sustainable solution in a period of high global uncertainty and volatility. Instead, a broader set of measures is required to manage external imbalances and inflation risks.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

J
James A
As someone who tracks emerging markets from New York, India's story is still better than many others. The rupee has actually held up better than the Turkish lira or Brazilian real. But yes, with $6.4 billion FII outflows, there's clearly a confidence issue. Maybe investors are worried about political stability? Or is it just global risk-off mode? Interesting times ahead.
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Priya S
Every time oil prices spike, we talk about structural reforms, but nothing changes. Why can't we aggressively push for electric vehicles and solar? We have the technology and the talent. Instead, we keep subsidizing petrol and diesel. The common person ends up paying for this through inflation - my monthly grocery bill has increased by 20% in the last year. Something has to give.
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Michael C
I moved my portfolio from Indian equities to US bonds last year. Not because I don't believe in India's story, but because the risk-reward doesn't add up right now. The CAD at $54 billion is concerning - that's almost 2% of GDP. Good to see SBI acknowledging the problem, but I need to see actual policy moves before coming back.
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Rohit P
I'm a small business owner in Pune. The rupee depreciation is actually helping my export business - our clients in Europe are getting more for their euros. But the flip side is machinery and raw material imports are killing us. The government should consider a managed float like China does. Let the rupee depreciate gradually but not too fast. And please control inflation - my employees keep asking for salary hikes.

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