India's Experience in Navigating the Trilemma: Do Capital Controls Help?
Managing capital flows is the key policy challenge for emerging economies like India in the aftermath of the crisis. In contrast to other emerging markets who are levying capital controls, India‘s macro-monetary framework is distinguished by significant restrictions that help manage inflows. Against this context, the paper characterizes India‘s capital account management strategy through illustrating the 2006-07 episodes of capital inflows in the buildup to the global financial crisis. It shows how these restrictions allowed the authorities to straddle the open-economy trilemma and balance the exchange rate and price stability objectives. It offers relevant evidence on the effectiveness of India‘s capital controls in retaining monetary autonomy.
E5 - Monetary Policy, Central Banking and the Supply of Money and Credit ; E58 - Central Banks and Their Policies ; F3 - International Finance ; F36 - Financial Aspects of Economic Integration ; G15 - International Financial Markets ; G18 - Government Policy and Regulation ; O16 - Financial Markets; Saving and Capital Investment