India Needs an Economic Emergency Strategy
By: Anil K. Jain, FCA – Sr.
Macroeconomist
(Mail: caindia@hotmail.com)

The world economy today is entering one of the most
uncertain and fragile phases in recent history. The ongoing geopolitical
tensions in the Gulf region, combined with persistent inflation, rising crude
oil prices, slowing global trade, and weakening currencies, are creating
serious macroeconomic challenges for almost every nation.
India cannot remain immune from these global
shocks. The rise in fuel prices, food inflation, logistics costs, and pressure
on the rupee has already begun affecting industries, consumers, airlines,
exporters, and financial institutions. Even leading companies like Air India
are facing enormous operational pressure due to escalating aviation turbine
fuel costs and volatile international markets.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in several of his
recent speeches and economic observations, has openly reflected concern
regarding inflationary pressures, global uncertainty, supply-chain disruptions,
and the future of economic stability. His repeated emphasis on “self-reliance,”
“economic resilience,” and “global instability” clearly demonstrates the
seriousness of the challenge confronting India.
The Government of India has introduced several
fiscal and monetary interventions to stabilise the rupee, contain inflation,
and protect foreign exchange reserves. However, these are essentially routine
economic responses. They may soften the impact temporarily, but they are
insufficient if the Gulf conflict intensifies or crude oil prices move toward
USD 140–150 per barrel.
India imports nearly 5 million barrels of crude oil
daily. Every USD 10 increase in crude prices increases India’s annual import
burden by approximately USD 15 billion. If oil prices remain elevated for an
extended period, India’s current account deficit could widen substantially, putting
enormous pressure on the rupee and foreign exchange reserves.
At one stage, India’s foreign exchange reserves
crossed USD 645 billion, but periods of capital outflows and rising import
costs have repeatedly reduced reserve strength. Simultaneously, the rupee has
shown vulnerability against the US dollar during global uncertainty.
The concern is not India-specific. Major global
leaders and institutions are already warning about a possible prolonged
recessionary phase. Former UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak described inflation
and energy insecurity as “the most severe economic challenge in generations.” French
President Emmanuel Macron warned the world about “the end of abundance,”
signaling the collapse of cheap energy and easy liquidity. Canadian Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau acknowledged that rising inflation was severely affecting
middle-class families. The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank have
repeatedly cautioned that the world economy may witness slower growth,
recessionary conditions, and financial instability over the coming years.
Under these difficult circumstances, India must
think beyond conventional economic policies. Extraordinary global crises
require extraordinary national decisions.
1. Massive Foreign Exchange Liberalisation
Scheme
India should immediately announce a special foreign
exchange inflow scheme encouraging overseas Indian wealth to return home
without excessive procedural complications. It is estimated by various
international studies that Indians and persons of Indian origin hold overseas
assets running into several hundred billion dollars. A substantial amount of
this wealth remains parked outside India due to fear of litigation, taxation
complexity, regulatory scrutiny, and procedural rigidity.
If the Government assures:
India could potentially attract USD 200–300 billion
over the next few years. Even if only 15–20% of overseas Indian wealth enters
the Indian banking system, it could dramatically strengthen foreign exchange
reserves and improve rupee stability. Countries such as Indonesia and Brazil
successfully used tax amnesty and capital repatriation schemes to improve
liquidity and strengthen domestic investment.
2. India as the Global
Manufacturing Capital
The second revolutionary step should be to
transform India into the world’s most attractive manufacturing destination. Global
corporations are actively diversifying manufacturing away from concentrated
geographies. India can capitalize on this historic shift.
The Government should offer:
If India attracts even 10% of the global
manufacturing diversification currently moving across Asia, the country could
witness foreign direct investment inflows exceeding USD 500 billion over the
next decade. Countries like Vietnam increased exports from less than USD 50
billion to more than USD 370 billion through aggressive manufacturing
incentives and export-oriented policies. Similarly, Singapore and the United Arab
Emirates transformed themselves into global commercial hubs through
investor-friendly policies and tax certainty.
3. International Gaming and
Tourism Zones
India should create internationally regulated
entertainment and gaming zones in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Lakshadweep,
and selected coastal territories on the lines of Macau and Las Vegas. Macau’s
gaming revenues at one stage exceeded USD 35 billion annually — several times
larger than Las Vegas gaming revenues. If India develops world-class tourism,
convention, hospitality, cruise, and entertainment infrastructure integrated
with regulated gaming, the country can generate:
Even attracting 5 million additional high-value
international tourists annually could generate foreign exchange earnings
exceeding USD 25–30 billion.
4. Make Export Income Tax Free
India should immediately consider making export
profits income-tax free for at least 15 years in strategic sectors.
This can substantially increase:
China used aggressive export incentives for decades
before emerging as the world’s manufacturing giant. South Korea similarly
promoted exports aggressively during its industrial expansion period. If
India’s annual exports rise from approximately USD 770 billion to USD 1.5
trillion over the next decade, the country can fundamentally transform its
economic strength and currency stability.
5. Global Financial Services and
Offshore Banking Hub
India should establish a powerful international
financial services ecosystem similar to Dubai International Financial Centre
and Singapore Financial District.
The Government can create:
This can attract trillions of dollars in financial
transactions and investment activity.
6. Monetisation of Religious and
Medical Tourism
India possesses unmatched spiritual, cultural,
Ayurvedic, and medical tourism potential.
Cities like Varanasi, Rishikesh, Bodh Gaya, and
Tirupati can become global tourism magnets. India already receives millions of
medical tourists annually due to affordable healthcare and skilled doctors.
With proper infrastructure and international marketing, medical tourism alone
can generate more than USD 50 billion annually over time.
7. Gold Monetisation and
Sovereign Gold Bonds
Indian households are estimated to hold nearly
25,000 tonnes of gold — one of the largest private gold reserves in the world. At
current international prices, this gold is worth well above USD 1.5 trillion.The
Government should aggressively expand:
Mobilising even 10% of household gold can
significantly reduce gold imports and strengthen foreign exchange reserves.
8. Green Energy Export Leadership
India should aggressively become a global leader
in:
Global green energy investment is expected to cross
trillions of dollars in the coming decades. India has the opportunity to become
a major export supplier in the clean energy economy.
The Need for Economic Courage
India stands at a defining economic moment. Routine
policy measures may not be sufficient in an era of global uncertainty,
inflation, recessionary threats, and geopolitical instability. The country
needs bold leadership, economic imagination, and decisive action.
The Finance Minister of India today carries an enormous responsibility. The decisions taken over the next few years may determine whether India merely survives global turbulence — or emerges from it as one of the world’s strongest economic powers. History rewards nations that act courageously during crises. India possesses the demographic strength, entrepreneurial energy, strategic location, and intellectual capital to transform this global disruption into a historic economic opportunity.

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