By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Explain the structure of the Balance of Payments: current account (trade, services, transfers) and capital account (FDI, FII, borrowings)
  • 2Define exchange rate; distinguish between appreciation and depreciation; explain the effects on exporters and importers
  • 3Explain the demand for and supply of foreign exchange and their sources
  • 4Distinguish between fixed, floating, and managed float (dirty float) exchange rate systems; identify India's system
  • 5Explain why India typically runs a current account deficit and how it is financed
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Why this chapter matters
Open Economy Macroeconomics explains the rupee's exchange rate, India's current account deficit, and why the RBI intervenes in forex markets — topics that dominate economic news. The Balance of Payments structure (current account + capital account) and the three exchange rate systems are reliable exam questions.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Open Economy Macroeconomics

"The rupee's value against the dollar affects what you pay for petrol, for imported phones, and for your foreign vacation."

1. Chapter Overview

An OPEN ECONOMY trades goods, services, and financial assets with the rest of the world. This chapter covers: the Balance of Payments (BoP) — the record of all transactions with the world (current account + capital account), the Foreign Exchange Market (how exchange rates are determined), and EXCHANGE RATE SYSTEMS (fixed, floating, managed float — India's system).


2. Balance of Payments (BoP)

The BoP is a DOUBLE-ENTRY record of ALL economic transactions between residents of a country and the rest of the world, over a period.

Components

AccountWhat It Records
Current AccountEXPORTS and IMPORTS of goods (trade balance) and services (IT, tourism). Plus: remittances, investment income.
Capital AccountFDI (Foreign Direct Investment). FII/FPI (portfolio investment — stocks, bonds). External commercial borrowings. NRI deposits.
Errors and OmissionsStatistical discrepancies (the BoP must BALANCE — this is the balancing item).

BoP Deficit and Surplus

  • Current Account DEFICIT: imports > exports of goods and services. India has RUN a current account deficit for most years. 'India imports more than it exports — especially oil.'
  • A current account deficit is FINANCED by a capital account SURPLUS (borrowing, FDI, FII, remittances).
  • 'A current account deficit is not necessarily BAD — if it's financing investment. But it CAN be a vulnerability.'

3. Foreign Exchange Market

  • Where CURRENCIES are bought and sold
  • The Exchange Rate = the price of one currency in terms of another ($1 = ₹83)
  • Appreciation: Rupee becomes STRONGER. ₹83/. Good for importers. Bad for exporters.
  • Depreciation: Rupee becomes WEAKER. ₹83/. Bad for importers. Good for exporters.

Demand and Supply of Foreign Exchange

  • DEMAND for foreign exchange comes from: importers (need dollars to pay for goods), Indians travelling abroad, Indian firms investing abroad, repayment of foreign debt
  • SUPPLY of foreign exchange comes from: exporters (earn dollars), foreign tourists in India, FDI/FII inflows, remittances from NRIs

4. Exchange Rate Systems

SystemHow It WorksIndia's System
FixedCentral bank PEGS the currency to another currency (or gold). Must maintain the peg by buying/selling reserves.Not India. (Bretton Woods era — ended 1971.)
FloatingMarket DETERMINES the exchange rate. Supply and demand. No central bank intervention.Not fully.
Managed Float (Dirty Float)Exchange rate is MARKET-DETERMINED — but the CENTRAL BANK INTERVENES to prevent excessive volatility.THIS IS INDIA'S SYSTEM. The RBI buys/sells dollars to manage the rupee — not to fix a rate, but to SMOOTH FLUCTUATIONS.

5. Exam Focus

  1. BoP — Current Account (trade, services, remittances) and Capital Account (FDI, FII, borrowings).
  2. Current Account Deficit — what it means. India: historically deficit.
  3. Foreign exchange — demand and supply. Appreciation vs. Depreciation.
  4. Exchange rate systems — fixed, floating, managed float. India: Managed Float.

6. Conclusion

The open economy connects India to the WORLD:

  • BoP: Current account (trade, services). Capital account (investment). 'The current account deficit is the bill India presents to the world — and the capital account is how the bill gets paid.'
  • EXCHANGE RATE: The rupee's price. Managed float — market determines, RBI smooths.
  • VULNERABILITY: Countries that borrow heavily in foreign currency (dollar debt) can face CRISIS if their currency depreciates sharply.

'In a globalised world, no economy is an island. The Balance of Payments is the record of how an island connects to the ocean.'

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Balance of Payments (BoP) Structure
CURRENT ACCOUNT: (a) Merchandise (goods) trade: exports − imports = Trade Balance. (b) Invisibles: services (IT, tourism, shipping), remittances (income transfers by NRIs), investment income (dividends, interest received/paid). Current Account Balance = Trade Balance + Invisibles balance. CAPITAL ACCOUNT: (a) FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) — long-term, controlling stake. (b) FII/FPI (Foreign Portfolio Investment) — short-term, stocks and bonds. (c) ECB (External Commercial Borrowings by Indian firms). (d) NRI deposits. (e) Change in forex reserves. OVERALL BoP = Current Account + Capital Account. If BoP is in surplus → forex reserves INCREASE. If deficit → forex reserves DECREASE (or borrowings fill the gap).
India's typical pattern: CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT (imports > exports, esp. oil) financed by CAPITAL ACCOUNT SURPLUS (FDI + FII + remittances). Key numbers 2024-25: Current account deficit ~1.5-2% of GDP; forex reserves ~$670 billion.
Exchange Rate Concepts
EXCHANGE RATE: Price of one currency in terms of another. '₹83 per $1' = the exchange rate. APPRECIATION: Domestic currency STRENGTHENS. ₹83/$ → ₹80/$. Fewer rupees buy $1. DEPRECIATION: Domestic currency WEAKENS. ₹83/$ → ₹86/$. More rupees needed to buy $1. EFFECTS: Depreciation → exports become CHEAPER for foreigners (good for exporters) + imports become MORE EXPENSIVE for Indians (bad for importers; raises import costs = inflation). Appreciation → exports become MORE EXPENSIVE (bad for exporters) + imports become CHEAPER (good for importers; lower inflation).
India is a major oil importer. When the rupee depreciates, oil (priced in $) costs MORE in rupees → petrol prices rise → inflation. This is why a weak rupee is a problem for India specifically. IT exports benefit from depreciation (they earn in $, convert to rupees).
Demand and Supply of Foreign Exchange
DEMAND FOR FOREIGN EXCHANGE (say, USD) arises from: (1) Indians buying imported goods (pay in $). (2) Indians travelling abroad. (3) Indian firms investing abroad (FDI outflows). (4) Repayment of foreign loans. (5) Speculative demand (expect dollar to rise). SUPPLY OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE arises from: (1) Indian exporters (earn $ from exports, convert to ₹). (2) Foreign tourists visiting India. (3) FDI and FII INFLOWS into India. (4) NRI remittances (NRIs send $, converted to ₹). (5) ECB receipts. If Demand for $ > Supply of $ → rupee DEPRECIATES. If Supply of $ > Demand → rupee APPRECIATES.
India's remittances (~$125 billion in 2023-24) are the LARGEST single source of dollar supply after merchandise exports. This is why NFIA is positive for India and why NRI confidence matters for exchange rate stability.
Exchange Rate Systems
FIXED EXCHANGE RATE: Central bank PEGS the rate to another currency (or gold). Must defend the peg by buying/selling forex reserves. Provides stability but LOSES monetary policy independence. (Bretton Woods system, 1944-1971). FLOATING EXCHANGE RATE: Market determines the rate. Pure supply and demand. No central bank intervention. High volatility. MANAGED FLOAT (DIRTY FLOAT): Market-determined, but CENTRAL BANK INTERVENES to SMOOTH EXCESSIVE FLUCTUATIONS — not to fix a rate, but to prevent disruptive volatility. INDIA'S SYSTEM: Managed Float. The RBI buys dollars when the rupee appreciates too fast (to protect exporters) and sells dollars when the rupee depreciates too fast (to control inflation). India's exchange rate has depreciated gradually from ~₹45/$ in 2000 to ~₹83-84/$ in 2024-25.
Most likely MCQ: 'What exchange rate system does India follow?' Answer: MANAGED FLOAT (also called dirty float). NOT fixed (India doesn't peg). NOT pure float (RBI intervenes regularly).
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Saying depreciation is always bad for an economy
Depreciation is BAD for importers (oil, electronics become more expensive) and for inflation (import costs rise). But depreciation is GOOD for exporters (their goods become cheaper for foreign buyers, so export volumes rise). India's IT sector, which earns revenue in dollars and reports in rupees, BENEFITS from rupee depreciation. Whether depreciation is net positive or negative depends on whether you're a net importer or exporter.
WATCH OUT
Confusing FDI with FII
FDI (Foreign Direct Investment): Long-term investment in physical assets — building factories, acquiring companies. Creates lasting jobs and industrial capacity. 'SMART MONEY' — harder to withdraw. FII (Foreign Institutional Investment / FPI): Short-term investment in financial markets — stocks, bonds. Can be withdrawn quickly. Called 'HOT MONEY' because it can exit rapidly during crises, causing sudden rupee depreciation. FDI is preferred over FII for stability.
WATCH OUT
Saying India has a balance of payments DEFICIT because it has a current account deficit
India has a current account DEFICIT but a capital account SURPLUS (large FDI, FII, NRI deposits, remittances). The OVERALL BoP = current account + capital account. India's overall BoP is often in SURPLUS (forex reserves have generally been rising), meaning the capital account surplus MORE THAN COMPENSATES for the current account deficit.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· appreciation-depreciation
The exchange rate changes from ₹80/$ to ₹85/$. (i) Has the rupee appreciated or depreciated? (ii) How does this affect Indian software exporters who earn in dollars? (iii) How does this affect Indian families buying an imported iPhone?
Show solution
(i) DEPRECIATION: It now takes MORE rupees (₹85 vs ₹80) to buy $1. The rupee has weakened/depreciated. (ii) BENEFIT for software exporters: An Indian IT company earns, say, $1 million from a US client. At ₹80/$: ₹8 crore. At ₹85/$: ₹8.5 crore. The SAME dollar income converts to MORE rupees. Indian IT firms' rupee revenues and profits RISE when the rupee depreciates — even without winning new contracts. (iii) HARM to importers: An iPhone priced at $1,000 in the US. At ₹80/$: costs ₹80,000 in India. At ₹85/$: costs ₹85,000. The iPhone becomes ₹5,000 more expensive for the Indian buyer. All imported goods — oil, electronics, machinery — cost MORE rupees after depreciation, contributing to inflation.
Q2MEDIUM· bop-structure
Classify each of the following as current account or capital account transactions in India's Balance of Payments: (a) Tata Motors exports cars to the UK; (b) Reliance borrows from a US bank; (c) An NRI in the UAE sends money to his family in Kerala; (d) Apple Inc. builds a manufacturing plant in India; (e) An Indian student pays tuition fees to a US university.
Show solution
(a) Tata Motors exports cars to the UK → CURRENT ACCOUNT (merchandise/goods exports). A credit entry — India earns foreign exchange. (b) Reliance borrows from a US bank (External Commercial Borrowing) → CAPITAL ACCOUNT. This creates a liability (must be repaid). It is a capital inflow. (c) NRI in UAE sends money to Kerala → CURRENT ACCOUNT (remittances/transfers). Private remittances are a current account credit item (invisible transfers). India is the world's largest remittance recipient. (d) Apple Inc. builds a manufacturing plant in India → CAPITAL ACCOUNT (FDI inflow). This is a long-term foreign direct investment in India's productive capacity. Capital account credit. (e) Indian student pays tuition fees to a US university → CURRENT ACCOUNT (services imports). Educational services are 'invisible imports.' India is paying for services consumed abroad. Debit entry.
Q3HARD· long-answer
Explain India's Balance of Payments situation. Why does India typically run a current account deficit, and how is it financed?
Show solution
INDIA'S BALANCE OF PAYMENTS — STRUCTURE: India's BoP consists of two major accounts: the Current Account and the Capital Account. Each records different types of economic transactions with the rest of the world. INDIA'S CURRENT ACCOUNT: MERCHANDISE TRADE (GOODS): India consistently runs a LARGE TRADE DEFICIT. India exports: IT services (not goods), software, pharmaceuticals, gems and jewellery, textiles, engineering goods. India imports: CRUDE OIL (biggest item, ~35-40% of import bill), electronics, gold, machinery, fertilisers. The trade deficit is structurally large because India imports expensive commodities (oil, gold) that it cannot produce domestically in sufficient quantity. INVISIBLES: India has a LARGE INVISIBLE SURPLUS: (1) IT/BPO services: India exports ~$250 billion/year in software and IT-enabled services — a massive surplus. (2) REMITTANCES: ~$125 billion/year sent by NRIs from Gulf countries, US, UK — the world's largest. (3) Tourism: India earns from foreign tourists; Indians also spend abroad. Net: modest positive. Overall: India's invisible surplus partially compensates for the merchandise deficit, but not fully. CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT: India's current account typically shows a DEFICIT of 1-2% of GDP (varies with oil prices). When global oil prices spike (as in 2022-23), the deficit widens. When oil is cheap or exports boom, the deficit narrows. WHY DOES THE CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT PERSIST? (1) Oil dependence: India imports ~85% of its oil — and cannot quickly substitute (though renewables are growing). (2) Electronic goods demand: India imports large quantities of smartphones, semiconductors, and consumer electronics. (3) Gold imports: Indians love gold (~800-1000 tonnes/year imported). These structural factors keep imports structurally higher than exports of goods. FINANCING THE CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT — THE CAPITAL ACCOUNT: India's current account deficit is financed by the CAPITAL ACCOUNT SURPLUS: (1) FDI inflows: India attracts ~$70-80 billion/year in foreign direct investment (manufacturing, services, tech). (2) FII/FPI inflows: Foreign institutional investors buy Indian stocks and bonds (~$30-50 billion/year, volatile). (3) ECB: Indian corporates borrow abroad. (4) NRI deposits (FCNR, NRE accounts). OVERALL BoP: The capital account surplus has generally exceeded the current account deficit → India's FOREIGN EXCHANGE RESERVES have been growing (now ~$670 billion, covering ~11-12 months of imports). THE RBI'S ROLE: The RBI manages the exchange rate under a MANAGED FLOAT system — intervening to smooth excessive volatility without defending a fixed rate. When the current account deficit widens and capital flows fall (e.g., during a global risk-off episode), the RBI SELLS dollars from its reserves to prevent disorderly rupee depreciation. When the capital account surplus is large, it BUYS dollars to prevent excessive appreciation (which would hurt exporters). CONCLUSION: India's BoP structure reflects its development stage — a large, growing economy that is still building its manufacturing base (current account deficit from importing capital goods and commodities) but attracting capital flows (capital account surplus). The challenge is to reduce the structural current account deficit by: (1) increasing domestic oil/renewable energy production, (2) growing manufactured goods exports (PLI schemes), and (3) reducing gold imports.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • BoP = Current Account + Capital Account. Must balance overall (any deficit financed by reserves or borrowings).
  • Current Account: merchandise trade (goods) + invisibles (services, remittances, investment income)
  • India's current account typically in DEFICIT (~1-2% of GDP): large oil/gold/electronics imports > goods exports
  • India's invisible surplus: IT services (~$250B) + remittances (~$125B) — partially offsets trade deficit
  • Capital Account: FDI (long-term, preferred) + FII (short-term, hot money) + ECBs + NRI deposits
  • Exchange rate ₹/$ appreciation → rupee stronger. Depreciation → rupee weaker (more ₹ per $)
  • Depreciation: good for exporters, bad for importers, raises import inflation
  • India = MANAGED FLOAT. RBI buys/sells dollars to smooth excessive volatility (not to fix rate)
  • Fixed rate: government sets rate, defends it with reserves. Floating: pure market determination.
  • Forex reserves India ~$670 billion (2024-25), covering ~11 months of imports

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 5-8 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Classification31Classify BoP transactions as current/capital account, credit/debit
Short Answer31Exchange rate systems (identify India's system); effects of depreciation; demand/supply of forex
Long Answer6occasionallyIndia's BoP situation; managed float vs fixed/floating; effects of exchange rate changes
Prep strategy
  • India's exchange rate system = MANAGED FLOAT (dirty float) — this is the most common MCQ. Know the difference from fixed (no flexibility) and pure float (no intervention).
  • For depreciation vs appreciation effects: make a two-column table — exporters (benefit from depreciation), importers/consumers (hurt by depreciation). Oil importers are the clearest example: India imports oil, so rupee depreciation = higher petrol prices.
  • BoP classification: current account = FLOWS of goods, services, income, transfers (consumption-type transactions). Capital account = changes in OWNERSHIP of assets/liabilities (investment-type transactions).

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Rupee-Dollar Rate and Petrol Prices

India imports ~85% of its crude oil. Crude is priced in US dollars. When the rupee falls from ₹80/$ to ₹85/$: the same barrel of crude costing $80 goes from ₹6,400 to ₹6,800 — a 6.25% cost increase for Indian oil companies, directly feeding into petrol/diesel prices. This is why rupee depreciation causes fuel price inflation — a direct application of the open economy macroeconomics in this chapter to everyday Indian life.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. For BoP classification: the quick test — 'Is this a FLOW of consumption (good/service/income/transfer)? → Current Account.' 'Is this a change in OWNERSHIP of assets or liabilities? → Capital Account.'
  2. For exchange rate system identification questions: never say 'India has a fixed exchange rate' — it does not. The answer is MANAGED FLOAT. Key evidence: the RBI regularly announces forex market interventions in its Annual Report and monetary policy statements.

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Study the 2013 'taper tantrum' — when the US Fed hinted at reducing QE, FII money fled emerging markets. The rupee fell from ₹55/$ to ₹68/$ in 3 months. The RBI responded by raising rates (to attract capital back) and using forex reserves. A perfect case study in how capital account volatility (hot money) destabilises the exchange rate
  • Compare India's BoP with China's — China runs a current account SURPLUS (manufactures more than it imports), maintains a managed peg to the dollar, and holds ~$3.2 trillion in reserves. This comparison illustrates different development models

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 12 Board (Economics)High
CUET (Economics)High
UPSC GS III (External Sector / Balance of Payments)High

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

The RBI manages the rupee to prevent EXCESSIVE volatility — not to prevent depreciation altogether. India typically has higher inflation than the US (~4-5% vs ~2-3%). Under purchasing power parity, higher inflation = weaker currency over time. Additionally, India's current account deficit means consistent demand for dollars exceeds supply, creating structural depreciation pressure. The RBI intervenes to SLOW the pace of depreciation and prevent disorderly moves — not to make the rupee permanently strong. From 2000 (₹45/$) to 2025 (₹83/$), the rupee has depreciated ~85% — roughly in line with India-US inflation differential over that period.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 27 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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