Why in the News?
RBI’s Annual Report 2025-26 showed that India’s Balance of Payments (BoP) deficit widened sharply to $30.8 billion in 2025-26, compared to $5 billion in 2024-25. This marks a major reversal from the $63.7 billion surplus in 2023-24. This highlights rising pressure on India’s external sector due to weaker foreign investments and high dollar outflows for imports such as oil and gold.
What is Balance of Payments (BoP)?
The Balance of Payments (BoP) is a systematic record of all economic transactions between a country and the rest of the world during a specific period (usually a year). It tracks the flow of foreign currency (mainly dollars) into and out of the country. In simple terms, BoP shows whether a country is earning more dollars than it spends or spending more than it earns.
What are the components of BoP?
- Current Account (Trade and Income Flows): It records transactions related to:
- Goods Trade: Exports and imports of merchandise (e.g., crude oil, machinery).
- Services Trade: IT services, tourism, consulting, shipping.
- Remittances: Money sent by Indians working abroad.
- Investment Income: Interest, dividends, profits.
- Example: India imports crude oil and exports IT services.
- Capital Account: Investments and Capital Flows: It records:
- Foreign Direct Investment (FDI): Long-term investments in industries.
- Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI): Investment in stocks and bonds.
- External Borrowings: Loans from abroad.
- Banking Capital and Other Transfers
- Example: A foreign company investing in India or FIIs buying Indian shares.
How is BoP interpreted?
- BoP Surplus: Dollar inflows exceed outflows, strengthens forex reserves.
- BoP Deficit: Dollar outflows exceed inflows, RBI may use foreign exchange reserves to bridge the gap.
- In 2025-26, India recorded a BoP deficit of $30.8 billion, meaning the country spent more foreign currency than it received, raising concerns about external sector stability.
Why has India’s Balance of Payments deteriorated sharply in 2025-26?
- Balance of Payments Deficit: India recorded a BoP deficit of $30.8 billion in 2025-26, compared to $5 billion in 2024-25, showing a sharp deterioration in external sector stability.
- Sharp Reversal: India moved from a BoP surplus of $63.7 billion in 2023-24 to a large deficit in just two years, indicating weakening capital inflows.
- Foreign Exchange Pressure: RBI had to finance the deficit through foreign exchange reserves, leading to reserve depletion.
- Investment Slowdown: Net foreign investment inflows into India witnessed a sharp decline, worsening the external financing gap.
How do the current account and capital account shape India’s external position?
- Current Account: Captures trade in goods and services, remittances, and cross-border income flows.
- Capital Account: Includes foreign direct investment (FDI), foreign portfolio investment (FPI), external borrowings, and assistance.
- Persistent Current Account Deficit (CAD): India generally imports more than it exports, making CAD a structural feature of the economy.
- Trade Deficit: India’s merchandise trade deficit stood at $251.6 billion in 2025–26, improving from $286.9 billion in the previous year, but still remaining substantially large.
- Services Surplus (‘Invisible Trade’): India earned a services surplus of $221.4 billion in 2025-26, lower than $263.9 billion in 2024-25, reducing the cushion available against merchandise deficits.
Why did the capital account weaken despite India’s growth story?
- Capital Account Contraction: Capital account surplus declined sharply to $72 million in 2025-26, compared to $16.6 billion in 2024-25. This indicates weak external financing.
- Funds Held Abroad: Indians parked larger amounts abroad through delayed export receipts, advance import payments, and overseas holdings. This creates a deficit of $22.6 billion, compared to $7.4 billion previously.
- Geopolitical Impact: Trade disruptions linked to the West Asia crisis increased payment uncertainties and external pressures.
- Foreign Portfolio Investor (FPI) Outflows: FPIs withdrew $4.3 billion more than they invested in 2025-26, reversing the previous trend where inflows exceeded outflows.
Why is the government especially concerned about oil and gold imports?
- Oil Dependence: India imports nearly 90% of its crude oil requirement, making external balances highly vulnerable to global oil price shocks.
- Gold Demand: India produces negligible gold domestically despite large consumer demand, increasing pressure on dollar reserves.
- Dollar Outflow: A substantial portion of India’s foreign exchange outflow is used to pay for oil and gold imports.
- Policy Response: The government raised import duty on gold and silver from 6% to 15% and restricted imports of several silver categories to reduce external pressure.
- Consumption Advisory: Prime Minister Narendra Modi urged citizens to moderate fuel consumption and gold purchases, reflecting concern regarding dollar outflows.
What are the broader macroeconomic implications of a worsening BoP deficit?
- Forex Reserve Depletion: Persistent BoP deficits force RBI to utilise foreign exchange reserves, reducing external buffers.
- Currency Pressure: Sustained dollar outflows may weaken the Indian Rupee, increasing imported inflation.
- Inflationary Impact: Higher oil import costs raise transportation and manufacturing expenses.
- External Vulnerability: Reduced capital inflows increase dependence on volatile external borrowing.
- Investor Sentiment: Weak BoP signals may affect foreign investor confidence and macroeconomic stability perceptions.
Can India reduce structural vulnerability in its external sector?
- Export Diversification: Strengthens merchandise exports beyond traditional sectors.
- Manufacturing Expansion: Supports Make in India and production-linked incentives to reduce import dependence.
- Energy Transition: Accelerates renewable energy and domestic energy security to reduce oil import dependence.
- Financial Stability: Enhances resilience through stable FDI rather than volatile portfolio flows.
- Gold Monetisation: Encourages financialisation of savings through sovereign gold bonds and monetisation schemes.
Conclusion
RBI’s latest data highlights a growing imbalance in India’s external sector marked by widening dollar outflows, weakening foreign investments, and structural dependence on imported commodities. While India’s strong services exports continue to provide resilience, sustaining external stability will require export competitiveness, reduced import dependence, stable capital inflows, and prudent macroeconomic management.
PYQ Relevance
[UPSC 2019] How would the recent phenomena of protectionism and currency manipulations in world trade affect macroeconomic stability of India?
Linkage: India’s worsening Balance of Payments (BoP) and rising dollar outflows directly affect macroeconomic stability, exchange rate management, foreign exchange reserves, and external vulnerability. The issue links external trade dynamics with rupee stability and capital flows.

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