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India’s External Debt as at the end of March 2010

As per the standard practice, India's external debt statistics for the quarters ending March and June are released by the Reserve Bank of India and those for the quarters ending September and December by the Ministry of Finance, Government of India. The external debt data are released with a lag of one quarter. The external debt data, as compiled in the standard format, as at end-March 2010 in Rupees and US dollar terms and revised data for the earlier quarters are set out in Statement 1 and 2, respectively. The major developments relating to India’s external debt as at end-March 2010 are presented in the following paragraphs.

Major Highlights

(i) India’s external debt, as at end-March 2010, was placed at US $ 261.4 billion (18.9 per cent of GDP) recording an increase of US $ 36.9 billion or 16.5 per cent over the end-March 2009 level on account of significant increase in IMF liabilities due to additional allocations of SDR, commercial borrowings, NRI deposits and short-term trade credits.

(ii) Excluding the valuation effects due to depreciation of US dollar against other major international currencies and Indian Rupee, the stock of external debt has increased by US$ 30.4 billion over the stock as at end-March 2009.

(iii) The share of commercial borrowings stood highest at 27.2 per cent as at end-March 2010 followed by short-term debt (20.1 per cent), NRI deposits (18.4 per cent) and multilateral debt (16.3 per cent).

(iv) The debt service ratio increased to 5.5 per cent during 2009-10 as compared to 4.6 per cent during 2008-09.

(v) Based on residual maturity, short-term debt accounted for 41.2 per cent of the total external debt as at end-March 2010. Whereas the share of short-term debt, by original maturity, was 20.1 per cent of the total external debt stock.

(vi) The ratio of short-term debt to foreign exchange reserves at 18.8 per cent as at end- March 2010 was higher compared to 17.2 per cent as at end-March 2009.

(vii) The US dollar accounted for 58.2 per cent of the total external debt stock as at end-March 2010 followed by Indian rupee (13.8 per cent).

(viii) India’s foreign exchange reserves provided a cover of 106.7 per cent to the external debt stock at the end of March 2010 as compared with 112.2 per cent as at end-March 2009.

1. India’s External Debt as at end-March 2010

(i) India’s external debt, as at end-March 2010, was placed at US$ 261.4 billion (18.9 per cent of GDP) recording an increase of US$ 36.9 billion or 16.5 per cent over the end-March 2009 level on account of significant increase in IMF liabilities due to additional allocations of SDRs by the IMF, commercial borrowings, NRI deposits and short-term trade credits.

(ii) The long-term debt at US$ 209.0 billion and short-term debt at US$ 52.4 billion accounted for 79.9 per cent and 20.1 per cent, respectively, of the total external debt as at end-March 2010.

(iii) The share of commercial borrowings continued to be highest at 27.2 per cent in the total external debt as at end-March 2010 followed by short-term debt (20.1 per cent), NRI deposits (18.4 per cent) and multilateral debt (16.3 per cent) (Table 1).

Table 1: External Debt by Component

(US $ million)

Item

End- March

 

1991

1998

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010 P

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

1. Multilateral

20,900

29,553

31,744

32,620

35,337

39,490

39,538

42,733

 

(24.9)

(31.6)

(23.7)

(23.4)

(20.5)

(17.6)

(17.6)

(16.3)

2. Bilateral

14,168

16,969

17,034

15,761

16,065

19,708

20,613

22,596

 

(16.9)

(18.1)

(12.7)

(11.3)

(9.3)

(8.8)

(9.2)

(8.6)

3. IMF

2,623

664

1,029

981

1,029

1,120

1,018

6,041

 

(3.1)

(0.7)

(0.8)

(0.7)

(0.6)

(0.5)

(0.5)

(2.3)

4. Trade Credit

4,301

6,526

5,022

5,420

7,165

10,328

14,490

16,878

 

(5.1)

(7.0)

(3.7)

(3.9)

(4.2)

(4.6)

(6.5)

(6.5)

5. ECBs

10,209

16,986

26,405

26,452

41,443

62,334

62,413

70,986

 

(12.2)

(18.2)

(19.7)

(19.0)

(24.0)

(27.8)

(27.8)

(27.2)

6. NRI Deposits

10,209

11,913

32,743

36,282

41,240

43,672

41,554

48,092

 

(12.2)

(12.7)

(24.4)

(26.1)

(23.9)

(19.5)

(18.5)

(18.4)

7. Rupee Debt

12,847

5,874

2,302

2,059

1,951

2,017

1,527

1,657

 

(15.3)

(6.3)

(1.7)

(1.5)

(1.1)

(0.9)

(0.7)

(0.6)

8. Long-term Debt (1to 7)

75,257

88,485

116,279

119,575

144,230

178,669

181,153

208,983

 

(89.8)

(94.6)

(86.8)

(86.0)

(83.7)

(79.6)

(80.7)

(79.9)

9. Short-term Debt

8,544

5,046

17,723

19,539

28,130

45,738

43,362

52,471

 

(10.2)

(5.4)

(13.2)

(14.0)

(16.3)

(20.4)

(19.3)

(20.1)

Total (8+9)

83,801

93,531

134,002

139,114

172,360

224,407

224,515

261,454

 

(100)

(100)

(100.0)

(100)

(100)

(100)

(100)

(100)

P: Provisional

IMF: International Monetary Fund; ECBs: External Commercial Borrowings; NRI: Non-Resident Indian

Note: Figures in parentheses are percentage to total external debt.

Source: Ministry of Finance, Government of India and Reserve Bank of India.

2. Valuation Changes

(i) The valuation effect reflecting the depreciation of the US dollar against other major international currencies and Indian rupee resulted in an increase in India’s external debt by US$ 6.6 billion during 2009-10. This implies that excluding the valuation effects, the stock of external debt as at end-March 2010 would have increased by US$ 30.4 billion over the level at end-March 2009.

(ii) Compared with the previous quarter (end-December 2009), the valuation effect reflecting the appreciation of the US dollar against other major international currencies and Indian rupee resulted in a decline of US$ 1.0 billion in India’s external debt. This implies that excluding the valuation effects, the stock of external debt as at end-March 2010 would have increased by US$ 10.6 billion over the level at end-December 2009 (Table 2).

Table 2: Valuation Effect on External Debt

(US$ million)

I

External debt end-March 2010

Total Variation over end-March 2009

Valuation Effects

Variation net of Valuation Effect

 

2,61,454

36,939

6,587

30,351

II

External debt end-March 2010

Total Variation over end-December 2009

Valuation Effects

Variation net of Valuation Effect

 

2,61,454

9,688

 -956

 10,644

3. Components of External Debt

(i) The loans under external assistance (multilateral and bilateral debt) increased by US$ 5.2 billion during 2009-10 compared with a lower increase of US$ 1.0 billion during the previous year (Table 3).

Table 3: External Debt – Outstanding and Variation

(US$ million)

Item

Outstanding at the end-of

Absolute variation

Percentage variation

Mar-08

Mar-09

Mar-10 P

Mar-08 to Mar-09

Mar-09 to Mar-10

Mar-08 to Mar-09

Mar-09 to Mar-10

1

2

4

4

5

6

7

8

1. Multilateral

39,490

39,538

42,733

48

3,195

0.1

8.1

2. Bilateral

19,708

20,613

22,596

905

1,983

4.6

9.6

3. IMF

1,120

1,018

6,041

-102

5,023

-9.1

493.4

4. Export Credit

10,328

14,490

16,878

4,162

2,388

40.3

16.5

5.Commercial Borrowings

62,334

62,413

70,986

79

8,573

0.1

13.7

6. NRI Deposits

43,672

41,554

48,092

-2,118

6,538

-4.8

15.7

7. Rupee Debt

2,017

1,527

1,657

-490

130

-24.3

8.5

8. Short term Debt

45,738

43,362

52,471

-2,376

9,109

-5.2

21.0

Of which
Short term trade credit

41,901

39,964

47,615

-1,937

7,651

-4.6

19.1

Total Debt

2,24,407

2,24,515

2,61,454

108

36,939

0.05

16.5

Memo Items

A. Long-Term Debt

1,78,669

1,81,153

2,08,983

2,484

27,830

1.4

15.4

B. Short-Term Debt

45,738

43,362

52,471

-2,376

9,109

-5.2

21.0

P: Provisional
Source: Ministry of Finance, Government of India and Reserve Bank of India

(ii) The increase in IMF liability at US$ 6.0 billion as at end-March 2010 was due to additional allocation to SDRs by the IMF amounting to US $ 4.7 billion under the general allocation on August 28, 2009 and US$ 0.3 billion under the special allocation on September 9, 2009.

(iii) Trade credits (both long-term and short-term) increased, by US $ 10.0 billion, as at end-March 2010 compared to US$ 2.2 billion over the level at end-March 2009.

(iv) The commercial borrowings increased by US$ 8.6 billion as at end-March 2010 over its level as at end-March 2009 as compared to a negligible increase  during the corresponding period of the previous year.

(v) The short-term debt increased by US$ 9.1 billion to US$ 52.5 billion as at end-March 2010 as compared to US$ 43.4 billion as at end-March 2009 mainly on account of rise in short-term trade credits.

(vi) Outstanding NRI deposits at US $ 48.1 billion as at end-March 2010 increased by US$ 6.5 billion over the level as at end-March 2009 mainly on account of valuation effects .

4. Currency Composition of India’s External Debt

(i) The currency composition of India’s external debt consists of major international currencies such as US Dollar, Japanese Yen, Euro, Pound Sterling, Special Drawing Rights (SDR) and the domestic currency i.e., Indian Rupee.

(ii) The US Dollar denominated debt continues to be the largest with a share of 58.2 per cent in the total external debt as at end-March 2010.  The share of Indian rupee in the total external debt stock accounted for 13.8 per cent as at end-March 2010 followed by Japanese yen (11.4 per cent), and SDR (10.7 per cent). The share of Euro accounted for 3.6 per cent as at end-March 2010 (Table 4).

Table 4: Currency Composition of India's External Debt

(Percentage share in total external debt)

Currency

As at end-March

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

US Dollar

47.7

48.8

51.1

55.3

54.1

58.2

Indian Rupee

19.4

18.8

18.5

16.2

15.4

13.8

Japanese Yen

10.4

10.9

11.4

12.0

14.3

11.4

SDR

14.9

14.3

12.4

10.5

9.8

10.7

Euro

4.6

4.4

3.9

3.5

4.1

3.6

Pound Sterling

2.6

2.6

2.4

2.2

2.0

1.8

Others

0.4

0.2

0.3

0.3

0.3

0.5

Total

100

100

100

100

100

100

Note: 1. Currency composition as at end-March 2008, end-March 2009 and end -March 2010 incorporates the original currency composition of short-term debt; in the previous years, the entire short-term debt was taken to be denominated in US dollars.
Source: Ministry of Finance, Government of India and Reserve Bank of India.

5. Instrument-wise Classification of External Debt

(i) The instrument-wise classification of India’s external debt across the borrower category reveals that loans accounted for 49.0 per cent of total debt outstanding as at end-March 2010 as compared to 52.9 per cent as at end-March 2009 (Table 5).

(ii) The share of trade credit (long-term and short-term) at 19.0 per cent as at end-March 2010 recorded a marginal increase as compared to 18.6 per cent as at end-March 2009.

(iii) The share of currency and deposits at 18.7 per cent of the total India’s external debt as at end-March 2010 showed a marginal decline as against 18.8 per cent as at end-March 2009.

Table 5: Instrument-wise Classification of External Debt Outstanding

(US$ million)

Sr. No.

Borrower

End-March 2009

End-March 2010

1

2

3

4

A.

Government (1+2+3)

55,874

67,065

1

Short-Term

939

1,519

 

(i) Money Market Instruments

939

1,519

2

Long-term {(i)+(ii)+(iii)}

53,917

59,506

 

(i)  Bonds and Notes

963

3,026

 

(ii)  Loans

51,680

55,101

 

(iii) Trade Credit

1,274

1,379

3

Other debt liabilities

1,018

6,041

 

 (i) IMF

1,018

6,041

B.

Monetary Authority

764

695

 1.

Short-term

764

695

 

(i) Currency and Deposits

764

695

C.

Non-Government (1+2)

1,67,877

1,93,694

1

Short-Term {(i)+(ii)}

41,659

50,257

 

(i)  Money Market Instruments

1,695

2,643

 

(ii)  Trade Credit

39,964

 47,615

2

Long-term {(i)+(ii)+(iii)+(iv)}

1,26,218

1,43,437

 

(i)  Bonds and Notes

16,890

21,591

 

(ii)  Loans

67,142

73,107

 

(iii)  Currency and Deposits

41,554

48,092

 

(iv) Trade Credit

632

647

 

Total External Debt (A+B+C)

2,24,515

2,61,454

Source: Ministry of Finance, Government of India and Reserve Bank of India.

6. External Debt by Residual Maturity

(i) While external debt is generally compiled in terms of original maturity, analysing the external debt, in particular short term debt in terms of residual maturity is important from the point of view of foreign exchange liquidity management and to ascertain the total foreign exchange outgo on account of debt service payments in the immediate future.

(ii) The ‘short-term debt by residual maturity’ comprises the repayments due under medium and long-term debt by original maturity during one year reference period along with the short-term debt with original maturity. The balance constitutes the long-term debt by residual maturity.

(iii) The repayments due within the next one year under medium and long-term debt constitute 51.3 per cent of the total short-term debt by residual maturity as at end-March 2010.

(iv) Based on residual maturity, the short-term debt accounted for 41.2 per cent of total external debt as at end-March 2010. The ratio of short-term debt by residual maturity to foreign exchange reserves worked out to 38.6 per cent at end-March 2010 (Table 6).

Table 6: Residual Maturity of External Debt Outstanding as at End-March 2010

(US $ million)

Components

Short-term up to one year

Long-term

Total

1 to 2 years

2 to 3 years

More than 3 years

(2) to (5)

1

2

3

4

5

6

1. Sovereign Debt (long-term)

4,188

4,304

4,730

52,322

65,544

2.  External Commercial Borrowings  (including trade credit)

12,954

14,414

16,566

51,412

95,346

3.  NRI deposits {(i)+(ii)+(iii)}

38,029

5,389

3,384

1,290

48,092

(i)  FCNR(B)

11,197

1,704

1,074

344

14,318

(ii) NR(E)RA

21,459

2,425

1,924

554

26,362

(iii) NRO

5,373

1260

385

393

7,412

4.  Short-term Debt* (Original maturity)

52,471

-

-

-

52,471

Total (1 to 4)

1,07,642

24,107

24,680

1,05,024

2,61,453

Memo Items

 

 

 

 

 

Short-term debt (Residual maturity as per cent of total external debt )

41.2

 

 

 

 

Short-term debt (Residual maturity as per cent of Reserves)

38.6

 

 

 

 

* Also includes short-term component of sovereign debt amounting to US$ 1,519 million.
Note: Residual Maturity of NRI Deposits is estimated on the basis of the Survey conducted
by the Reserve Bank on NRI deposits outstanding as on March 31, 2010.
Source: Ministry of Finance, Government of India and Reserve Bank of India.

7. Government and Non-Government External Debt

(i) Government (Sovereign) external debt stood at US$ 67.1 billion as at end-March 2010 as against US$ 54.8 billion as at end-March 2009. The share of Government external debt in the total external debt increased by 25.7 per cent as at end-March 2010 from 24.4 per cent as at end-March 2009.

(ii) The share of non-Government debt in total external debt has increased steadily over the period. As at end-March 2010, the share of non-Government debt in total external debt, however, declined to 74.3 per cent from 75.6 per cent at end-March 2009 (Table 7).

Table 7: Government and Non-Government External Debt

(US $ million)

Sr. No.

Components

End-March 

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

A.

Sovereign Debt (I+II)

45,682

47,697

46,259

49,360

58,068

55,874

67,065

 

(As a percentage of GDP)

(7.2)

(6.4)

(5.5)

(5.0)

(4.7)

(5.5)

(4.8)

I.

External Debt on Government Account under External Assistance

41,142

43,686

43,510

46,155

52,538

51,816

55,232

II.

Other Government External Debt @

4,540

4,011

2,749

3,205

5,530

4,058

11,833

B.

Non-Government Debt #

66,972

86,305

92,855

1,23,000

1,66,339

1,68,641

1,94,389

 

(As a percentage of GDP)

(10.8)

(11.7)

(11.2)

(12.5)

(13.4)

(15.0)

(14.1)

C.

Total External Debt (A+B)

1,12,654

1,34,002

1,39,114

1,72,360

2,24,407

2,24,515

2,61,454

 

(As a percentage of GDP)

(18.0)

(18.1)

(16.7)

(17.5)

(18.1)

(20.5)

(18.9)

 @: Other Government external debt includes Defence Debt, Investment in Treasury Bills/ Government Securities by FIIs,
Foreign Central Banks and International Institutions and IMF.
#: Includes external debt of Monetary Authority.
Source: Ministry of Finance, Government of India and Reserve Bank of India

8. Select Indicators of External Debt

(i) The ratio of external debt to GDP declined to 18.9 per cent as at end-March 2010 from 20.5 per cent as at end-March 2009 (Table 8).

(ii) The debt service ratio increased to 5.5 per cent during 2009-10 as compared to 4.6 per cent during 2008-09.

(iii) India’s foreign exchange reserves provided a cover of 106.7 per cent to the external debt stock at the end of March 2010 as compared to 112.2 per cent as at end-March 2009.

(iv) The share of concessional debt in total external debt declined to 16.8 per cent as at end-March 2010 from 18.7 per cent at end-March 2009 reflecting the sustainable increase in non-concessional private debt in India's external debt stock.

(v) The ratio of short-term debt to foreign exchange reserves at 18.8 per cent as at end-March 2010 was higher than that of 17.2 per cent in the previous year.

(vi) The share of short-term debt in total debt increased to 20.1per cent at end-March 2010 from 19.3 per cent at end-March 2009.

Table 8: India’s Key External Debt Indicators

Year

External Debt

Ratio of External Debt to GDP

Debt Service Ratio

Ratio of Foreign Exchange Reserves to Total Debt

Ratio of Concessional Debt to Total Debt

Ratio of Short-Term Debt to Foreign Exchange Reserves

Ratio of Short- Term Debt to Total Debt

(US $ billion)

(per cent)

(per cent)

(per cent)

(per cent)

(per cent)

(per cent)

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

1990-91

83.8

28.7

35.3

7.0

45.9

146.5

10.2

1995-96

93.7

27.0

26.2

23.1

44.7

23.2

5.4

2000-01

101.3

22.5

16.6

41.7

35.4

8.6

3.6

2001-02

98.8

21.1

13.7

54.7

35.9

5.1

2.8

2002-03

104.9

20.3

16.0*

72.5

36.8

6.1

4.5

2003-04

111.6

18.0

16.1**

101.2

35.8

3.9

4.0

2004-05

133.0

18.6

5.9^

106.4

30.7

12.5

13.3

2005-06

138.1

17.3

10.1#

109.8

28.4

12.9

14.1

2006-07

172.4

18.2

4.7

115.6

23.0

14.1

16.3

2007-08

224.4

18.1

4.8

138.0

19.7

14.8

20.4

2008-09

224.5

20.5

4.6

112.2

18.7

17.2

19.3

2009-10P

261.4

18.9

5.5 

106.7

16.8

18.8

20.1

P: Provisional
*  Works out to 12.4 per cent, with the exclusion of prepayment of external debt of US $ 3,430 million.
** Works out to 8.2 per cent with the exclusion of pre payment of external debt of US $ 3,797 million and redemption of Resurgent India Bonds (RIBs) of US $ 5,549 million.
^ works out to 5.7 per cent with the exclusion of pre payment of external debt of US $ 381 million.
# works out to 6.3 per cent with the exclusion of India Millennium Deposits (IMDs) repayments of US $ 7.1 billion and pre payment of external debt of US $ 23.5 million.
Source: Ministry of Finance, Government of India and Reserve Bank of India

Ajit Prasad
Manager

Press Release : 2009-2010/1793

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