India looks at NRIs to defuse crisis

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New York/ Mumbai: The patriotism of wealthy overseas Indians has helped the country avert economic crises in the past and it is little surprise that embattled policymakers are turning to them again to plug a record trade gap that is battering the rupee.
This time, though, big investors among the more than 25-million overseas Indian community — the world’s secondlargest diaspora — are staying away as the economic outlook darkens and political instability looms ahead of national elections.
Shoring up inflows from the overseas Indians is a key weapon in finance minister P. Chidambaram’s arsenal to prop up the rupee that has lost 20 per cent against the dollar so far this year and which dropped to a record low on Wednesday.
The rupee’s crash has boosted remittances, mainly from blue-collar workers overseas - particularly in the Gulf — who can get more rupees for hard currency.
However, it has not triggered a surge in high-value investments in real estate, private equity funds and stock markets, bankers and wealth managers said. Underlining the hesitancy, flows from non-resident Indians (NRIs) into bank deposits in the April-June quarter dropped to $5.5 billion from $6.6 billion a year-earlier, central bank data shows.
Investments in real estate by overseas Indians drop-ped about 30 per cent in the fiscal year that ended in March, according to the Confederation of Real Estate Developers’ Assoc-iations of India (CREDAI), an umbrella group of local property developers.
“People feel like there are too many unknowns. The most recent government has been ghastly, and nobody quite knows what comes after it. I haven't been optimistic about India for quite a while,” said Vasant Prabhu, chief financial officer of Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc  in New York. 

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