बेबाक · Editorial
A distant deal steadies the rupee — India's resilience remains unfinished
The end of the three-month US-Iran war cut crude and lifted the rupee to 94.58, but relief from the Strait of Hormuz is no substitute for resilience built at home.
The reprieve
The news that lifted Indian markets this week was made in Washington and Tehran, not in New Delhi. An agreement to end the war between the United States and Iran, and to open the Strait of Hormuz, sent Brent crude down 4.97% to $82.99 a barrel in futures trade. The rupee responded with relief: separate reports placed it 47 paise higher at 94.71 and 60 paise higher at 94.58 against the dollar. For an economy exposed to imported energy costs, a calmer Gulf is an unambiguous gift. But it is worth naming the gift honestly: a reprieve granted by a distant deal, not a dividend earned by domestic strength. That distinction matters more than the day's headline.
The core tension
Therein lies the tension. The same openness that lets a Gulf settlement ease pressure on the rupee is the channel through which the next shock will arrive. The Finance Minister was candid in attributing the currency's swings to a mix of global and domestic factors — an honest admission that the exchange rate is only partly India's to govern. When conflict around a crucial energy route can reshape India's search for cooking gas and redraw parts of its trade map, the country remains more price-taker than price-setter. Resilience is not the absence of shocks; it is the capacity to absorb them. On that measure, an economy still vulnerable to energy disruptions remains more exposed than its calmer market days suggest.
The case for confidence
The optimist's case is real and deserves a fair hearing. Jio Platforms, the technology arm of Reliance Industries Limited, has climbed 320 places into the global top 20 of the WIPO PCT rankings; Akash Ambani, Managing Director of Jio Platforms, described the rise as reflecting years of effort to turn JPL into a deep-tech company. Gujarat's Industrial Policy 2026 sets a ₹10 lakh crore investment target for advanced manufacturing, innovation and sustainable growth. Two new urea plants are set to add 25.4 lakh tonnes of domestic capacity, easing import dependence. And as The Hindu BusinessLine argues, free trade agreements can catalyse a manufacturing breakthrough if they are built around global demand, not just domestic supply. In a year of narrow global bets, India's appeal lies in the breadth of its market exposure. These are filings, plants and policies with substance behind them.
The case for caution
Yet the cautious case is equally grounded. Much of the celebrated diversification is a reshuffling of suppliers, not a reduction of dependence. As the war changed India's trade map, imports from Brazil rose 2.8 times to $2.7 billion and shipments from Peru were 3.7 times higher at over $2 billion, while Oman emerged as a key gateway amid India's hunt for LPG. Buying energy and other essentials through new routes is prudence, not sovereignty. A patent ranking and a large investment target are inputs; the output that matters is wider production, jobs and incomes. Growth that dazzles in league tables but does not reach the household it has just made cheaper to run is, by this paper's lights, an incomplete metric. The reprieve buys time; it does not buy structural change.
The way forward
The honest verdict is that India has been handed time, and time is not security. The way forward is to spend this calm deliberately. Reduce exposure to volatile energy routes by building a broader, cleaner and more reliable domestic energy base. Tie the incentives in frameworks like Gujarat's Industrial Policy 2026 to verifiable jobs and supplier ecosystems, not merely announced capital. Treat the two urea plants and Jio Platforms' patent gains as a template — make at home what the country still buys abroad — and align trade agreements, port capacity at gateways such as Oman, and energy sourcing into a single resilience plan. Atmanirbhar Bharat must be measured by import bills that fall and pay-cheques that rise. A rupee steadied by someone else's peace is borrowed strength; the only strength worth banking is the kind India builds for itself.
A rupee steadied by someone else's peace is borrowed strength; the only strength worth banking is the kind India builds for itself.
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