GS 3: EconomyGS 2: International Relations

'Cheap' global money flow into India drying up, Pg9

RBI flags concern as 'cheap' global money inflows into India dry up amid rising sovereign bond yields and West Asia crisis.

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Key Highlights:

  • The RBI's 2025-26 annual report expresses concern over high sovereign bond yields and potential interest rate hikes by global central banks due to the West Asia crisis.
  • Chief Economic Advisor warns of the end of quantitative easing and near-zero interest rates, calling it a major development in global capital markets.
  • 10-year government bond yields in major economies like the US, UK, and Japan have risen significantly from their lows during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Net capital flows into India have decreased, with 2024-25 seeing only $1.8 billion in inflows and the first nine months of 2025-26 showing net outflows of $580 million.

Detailed Insights:

  • Government bonds are debt instruments issued by a sovereign, considered risk-free assets, and their yields serve as a benchmark for setting interest rates across other fixed-income securities.
  • From 1999-2000 to 2020-21, bond yields in major economies steadily declined, with some instances of negative yields in Japan due to deflation or currency appreciation.
  • The rise in bond yields is attributed to the return of inflation, driven by supply chain disruptions, geopolitical events, and the end of quantitative easing policies by central banks.
  • Quantitative easing involved central banks creating new money to purchase government bonds, aiming to boost economic activity, but led to inflationary consequences and increased government debt.
  • India benefited from cheap global money, with net capital flows surging until 2023-24, but the trend has reversed, and foreign portfolio investors (FPI) have been pulling out more money than investing since 2020-21.
  • The narrowing differential between Indian and US 10-year government bond yields, along with rupee depreciation, makes India less attractive to foreign capital.
  • For foreign capital to return, India needs to offer a compelling growth story rather than relying on cheap global money.

Key Concepts Involved:

  • Sovereign Bond Yields: The effective annual interest rate on a government's debt instruments.
  • Quantitative Easing: A monetary policy where central banks inject liquidity by purchasing government bonds.
  • Inflation: A general increase in prices and fall in the purchasing value of money.
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