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To make its economy more stable, the State needs to overhaul its governance and civil services, and develop policies that will attract investments in infrastructure and social sectors.
Kuncheria P Isaac
Founder Vice Chancellor, APJ Abdul Kalam Kerala Technological University
Apropos ‘Hawkish Fed’ (June 19), the Fed sees domestic price pressures as structural rather than energy-driven. The narrowing yield spreads between Indian and US bonds could put pressure on the rupee regardless of how stable our own macroeconomic fundamentals remain. The RBI will need to stay watchful on capital outflows rather than assume domestic stability alone will protect the currency. The piece is also right in flagging that better real-time data would strengthen India’s monetary policy decisions.
SM Jeeva
Chennai
This refers to ‘FCNR (B) deposits — a counter perspective’ (June 19). The income squeeze facing Indian workers in the US, driven by layoffs, costly H-1B renewals, and persistent inflation, genuinely limits how much surplus the diaspora can park in such deposits regardless of attractive interest rates. Banks chasing aggressive targets risk mis-selling NR(E)RA balances as fresh FCNR(B) deposits, which would only invite regulatory scrutiny later. A more sustainable approach would be tailoring products to the diaspora’s actual liquidity needs rather than assuming higher rates alone will drive mobilisation.
Pon. Arun Kumar
Tirupur, TN
Published on June 19, 2026
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