INDIA’s EXTERNAL DEBT RISES TO $736.3 BILLION

Why in News :

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) reported that India’s external debt increased to $736.3 billion as of end-March 2025, registering an annual increase of $67.5 billion. The External Debt-to-GDP ratio also rose to 19.1%, up from 18.5% in March 2024.

Key Highlights of the Report:

  • Total External Debt: $736.3 billion (↑ $67.5 billion from FY24)
  • Debt-to-GDP Ratio: 19.1% (↑ from 18.5% in FY24)
  • Long-term Debt: $601.9 billion (↑ $60.6 billion YoY)
  • Short-term Debt Share: Fell marginally to 18.3% of total debt
  • Debt Service Ratio: Marginally declined by 0.1%, easing repayment burden

Debt Composition Analysis:

Currency Composition:

  • US Dollar: 54.2%
  • Indian Rupee: 31.1%
  • Japanese Yen, SDRs, and Euro: Smaller shares

Borrower Categories:

  • Non-Financial Corporations: 35.5%
  • Deposit-taking Corporations (excl. Central Bank): 27.5%
  • General Government: 22.9%
  • Others (e.g. Central Bank): Remainder

Instruments:

  • Loans: 34%
  • Currency & Deposits: 22.8%
  • Trade Credit & Advances: 17.8%
  • Debt Securities: 17.7%

What is External Debt?

External debt is money borrowed from foreign lenders, including:

  • Foreign governments
  • International financial institutions (e.g. IMF, World Bank)
  • Private commercial banks and investors

Why It Matters – Significance of the Data:

Moderate Debt-to-GDP Ratio (19.1%)

  • Though rising, it remains below global stress thresholds.
  • Indicates prudent overall debt management but requires close monitoring.

Rising Long-Term Debt

  • Reflects continued infrastructure and capital-intensive borrowing needs.
  • May indicate positive investment flows but adds to future repayment burden.

Decline in Short-Term Debt Share

  • Reduces immediate refinancing risk.
  • However, rise in short-term debt to forex reserves (20.1%) signals increasing vulnerability to currency shocks.

High USD Dependency (54.2%)

  • Heightens India’s exposure to exchange rate volatility and US interest rate cycles
  • Amplifies the impact of dollar appreciation, as seen with the $5.3 billion valuation effect.

Economic Implications:

External Vulnerability:

  • Any external shock (e.g., oil price spike, Fed rate hike) could worsen India’s external position.
  • High external debt means pressure on BoP stability, especially if export earnings stagnate.

Fiscal Management:

  • Servicing long-term debt may create medium-term fiscal pressures, especially if the rupee depreciates.

Policy Calibration:

  • The government and RBI must maintain a delicate balance between growth-led capital inflows and external sustainability.

Challenges & Way Forward : 

ChallengeWay Forward
Rising external liabilitiesPromote export competitiveness to generate forex for debt servicing
High dependence on USDDiversify currency basket in external borrowing
Short-term vulnerabilityMaintain adequate forex reserves and implement dynamic capital controls
Valuation shocksEnhance currency hedging mechanisms and FX risk management
Monitoring non-sovereign debtImprove transparency & monitoring of corporate external commercial borrowings (ECBs)

Ethics and Governance Angle:

  • Prudent debt management is a constitutional obligation and intergenerational responsibility.
  • Transparent disclosure by RBI reflects institutional accountability.
UPSC Relevance : 
GS3 – Indian Economy; External Sector; Resource Mobilization
Mains Practice Question:
Q. India’s rising external debt reflects both capital inflows and financial vulnerabilities. Examine the trends, associated risks, and policy responses required to ensure sustainable external sector management. (250 words)

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