
India’s falling rupee is not just a market story. It reflects deeper fault lines in the economy.
The June cover story of Outlook Business looks at how India’s persistent current account deficit, high import dependence, weakening foreign inflows and rising input costs are feeding into a cycle of currency pressure.
For an economy that imports heavily to produce, consume and grow, a weaker rupee can quietly raise costs, squeeze manufacturers and slow investment.
The question is no longer just why the rupee is falling — but whether India can break free from this currency curse.
Read the full cover story here:
Subscribe to Outlook Business and never miss an issue:
#Rupee #IndianEconomy #CurrentAccountDeficit #OutlookBusiness #Manufacturing
The June cover story of Outlook Business looks at how India’s persistent current account deficit, high import dependence, weakening foreign inflows and rising input costs are feeding into a cycle of currency pressure.
For an economy that imports heavily to produce, consume and grow, a weaker rupee can quietly raise costs, squeeze manufacturers and slow investment.
The question is no longer just why the rupee is falling — but whether India can break free from this currency curse.
Read the full cover story here:
Subscribe to Outlook Business and never miss an issue:
#Rupee #IndianEconomy #CurrentAccountDeficit #OutlookBusiness #Manufacturing
Shared byMicah Lim - 2 days ago
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