New Delhi: In an unprecedented address to the nation, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has asked Indians to curb their appetite for gold, reduce fuel consumption, and work from home to shield the rupee from a deepening currency crisis. The rupee has plunged to historic lows against the dollar, battered by soaring oil import bills and capital outflows triggered by the Middle East energy shock. But can personal sacrifice truly rescue a currency under siege?
The Prime Minister’s appeal is a stark admission of vulnerability. India imports nearly 85% of its oil, and the surge in crude prices following the Iran-Israel conflict has widened the current account deficit to a perilous 3.5% of GDP. The rupee has lost over 12% this year alone, forcing the Reserve Bank of India to burn through $50 billion in reserves to stem the slide. Yet, Modi’s prescription goes beyond macroeconomic mechanics. “Every ounce of gold not bought, every litre of fuel not burned, every hour worked from home will strengthen the rupee,” he declared.
Gold, a perennial favourite in Indian households, is a particular target. The country is the world’s second-largest consumer of the metal, importing over 800 tonnes annually. Each tonne costs roughly $60 million at current prices. A 10% reduction in gold imports would save nearly $5 billion a year a drop in the ocean against a $300 billion import bill but symbolic of the mindset needed. “Gold is dead capital,” says financial historian Ruchir Sharma. “It doesn’t earn interest, it doesn’t create jobs. But Indians view it as a hedge against inflation. Breaking that cultural bond is harder than balancing the budget.”
Fuel conservation is more immediately impactful. Every barrel of crude saved reduces the import burden. Modi’s call to work from home two days a week could cut petrol demand by 5%, shaving off $2 billion annually. But India’s infrastructure is ill-equipped. Only 30% of the workforce has jobs amenable to remote work; the rest are daily wagers, gig workers, or farmers. “For the rickshaw driver or the factory worker, working from home is a luxury they cannot afford,” notes economist Jayati Ghosh. “The burden of adjustment falls unevenly, hitting the poor hardest.”
The logic of austerity runs deeper. By reducing demand for dollars, Modi hopes to stem the rupee’s fall and curb imported inflation, which is already pushing food and energy prices higher. But critics argue that austerity alone is insufficient. “The crisis is structural, not behavioural,” warns former RBI governor Raghuram Rajan. “India needs to boost exports, attract foreign investment, and reduce its dependence on imported energy. Asking citizens to sacrifice is a stopgap, not a solution.”
The political calculus is equally fraught. Modi’s appeal echoes Indira Gandhi’s 1970s calls for sacrifice during the oil shock, but in an era of 24/7 news and social media, optics matter. Opposition parties have seized on the irony: a government that once promised “minimum government, maximum governance” now asking citizens to change lifestyles. The Congress party accused Modi of “passing the buck” after failing to build strategic oil reserves or push renewable energy fast enough.
Yet, the response from the public is mixed. In Mumbai’s Zaveri Bazaar, gold merchants report a 20% drop in footfall since the speech. “People are scared,” says jeweller Ashok Khandelwal. “They think buying gold is unpatriotic.” Online forums buzz with guilt and defiance. “Why should I stop buying gold when the government spends crores on foreign trips and fighter jets?” asks a Reddit user. Another retorts: “If everyone thinks like that, the rupee will collapse. We are all in this together.”
The deeper question remains: Can voluntary restraint stabilise a currency buffeted by global forces? History offers cautionary tales. In 2013, the “Taper Tantrum” sent the rupee into freefall; Modi’s predecessor, Manmohan Singh, also appealed for gold restraint. It barely moved the needle. The rupee eventually recovered only after the RBI raised interest rates and the Federal Reserve signalled caution. Today, the stakes are higher. The Middle East crisis shows no sign of abating, and the dollar, strengthened by US rate hikes, continues to drain emerging market currencies.
Economist Arvind Subramanian offers a middle ground: “Austerity can signal policy seriousness to markets and buy time. But it must be paired with credible reforms: cutting subsidies, opening sectors to FDI, and fast-tracking green energy. Otherwise, it’s just a PR exercise.”
For now, Modi has done what he can: framed the crisis as a test of national character. Whether Indians tighten their belts or not, the rupee’s fate will ultimately hinge on forces far beyond their control. The Prime Minister’s gamble is that sacrifice can become a virtuous cycle, restoring confidence and buying enough time for structural fixes. But as the rupee hovers near 85 to the dollar, the clock is ticking.







