To meet the increasing demand for Rupee, the Royal Monetary Authority (RMA) had to resort to purchase of Rupee through the sale of 200 million US dollars from international reserves in December 2011 and as the INR became acute again, by July 2012 Bhutan’s borrowing stood at INR 11.6 which includes INR3.6M from State Bank of India, INR 6M from Government of India and 2M from Druk Punjab Bank.
The present Rupee shortage in the country can be attributed to two main factors (i) rise in aggregate demand; and (ii) limited supply. The increase in aggregate demand has led to surge (increase) in imports as the domestic production capacity is unable to support the demand. On the supply front, the earnings from electricity exports to India remain Bhutan’s single largest export item, followed by exports of processed minerals like ferrosilicon, calcium carbide, cement, etc.
Demand factors
Major imports
Major imports include fuel, vehicles, heavy earthmoving equipment, industrial raw materials, food items and other essential commodities. These have exerted significant pressure on the Rupee every year.
The total number of vehicles imported from India was 1,103 (Nu. 309.83 million) in 2002, which has increased to 6,893 (Nu. 3.6 billion) in 2011. Of the total vehicle imports during 2002-2011, 83.4% were from India.
The import of fuel (petrol and diesel) increased from 42.76 million liters (720.89 million) in 2002 to 111 million liters (4.25 billion) in 2011 recording as one of the top ten imports from