Kunal Kundu from Societe Generale analyzes how the conflict in Iran exposes India’s macroweakness resulting from its dependence on energy imports and risks on trade routes. Kundu highlights the broad spillover effects of higher oil and gas prices on the consumption basket and external balances. He advocates a calibrated fiscal-monetary mix in which the central bank treats inflation as short-lived and targets government support to households.
Imported energy burdens and policy response
“Four weeks into the Iran conflict, the only constant is uncertainty. India is feeling its effects, exposing macro vulnerabilities in energy security, trade logistics, price stability and external balance.”
“Despite lower oil intensity as a share of GDP and a relatively limited oil trade deficit, heavy dependence on imported energy puts India at risk if disruptions persist.”
“The conflict highlights risks associated with the Strait of Hormuz and Red Sea route, increasing import risks and supplier concentration.”
“The spillover effects are wide-ranging because oil and gas power most of the consumption mix – electricity, plastics, fertilizers, chemicals and more.”
“The right approach: central bank treats inflation as transitory, ends monetary easing cycle by maintaining adequate liquidity; government implements targeted fiscal measures (with the support of RBI [Reserve Bank of India] dividend transfer) to reduce carryovers and support vulnerable households.”
(This article was created with the lend a hand of an artificial intelligence tool and has been reviewed by an editor.)
