Rs 90 For 1$: What It Means for Your Fuel, EMIs & Daily Budget


Mohul Ghosh

Mohul Ghosh

Dec 04, 2025


India has entered a new economic reality. On Wednesday, the Indian rupee slipped past ₹90 per US dollar for the first time in history — a symbolic and financial milestone that directly affects households, businesses, and students. While the drop from ₹89.94 seems modest, its consequences will ripple across the economy for months, if not years.

Rs 90 For 1$: What It Means for Your Fuel, EMIs & Daily Budget

Why the Rupee Crossed 90 — The Real Reasons

Three major forces pushed the rupee into uncharted territory:

1. Trade Tensions With the US

Recent negotiations collapsed, and Washington imposed steep tariffs — up to 50% — on several Indian exports. This dented investor confidence and affected earnings of key industries.

2. Massive Foreign Investor Exodus

Despite stable inflation and GDP growth, foreign portfolio investors pulled out $17 billion from Indian equities in 2025.

3. RBI’s Policy Shift

The IMF reclassified India’s exchange rate regime from “stabilized” to “crawl-like”, signalling that the RBI is now guiding — not defending — the rupee.
Instead of protecting it at all costs, the central bank is letting market forces play out, using its $690 billion forex reserve only when absolutely necessary.


How This Impacts the Average Indian Family

The ₹90/$ milestone is not just macroeconomics — it affects everyday life.

Costlier Fuel and Essentials

India imports 90% of its crude oil and over 60% of its edible oil. A weaker rupee means:

  • Higher petrol and diesel prices
  • Rising LPG costs
  • Expensive cooking oil

Inflation will squeeze middle-class budgets further.

Electronics, Appliances & Cars Get Expensive

Imports — from iPhones to laptops to car components — become costlier immediately. Retail prices will rise over the next few months.

Foreign Education Becomes a Luxury

A student paying $50,000/year now pays ₹45 lakh instead of ₹40 lakh.
EMIs on student loans will also increase sharply.

Travel Abroad Costs More

A family trip worth $2,000 now costs ₹1.8 lakh instead of ₹1.6 lakh.


Who Wins? Who Loses?

Winners

  • IT companies billing in dollars
  • Remittance recipients, with monthly inflows rising by thousands

Losers

  • Textile and manufacturing exporters, already hit by US tariffs
  • Small businesses relying on imported components
  • Students and borrowers with dollar exposure

What Should Families Do Now?

  • Avoid dollar-denominated loans
  • Hedge education payments
  • Budget using ₹93–95 per dollar for 2026
  • Invest remittances wisely
  • Diversify across export-heavy sectors


Mohul Ghosh
Mohul Ghosh
  • 4244 Posts

Subscribe Now!

Get latest news and views related to startups, tech and business

You Might Also Like

Recent Posts

Related Videos

   

Subscribe Now!

Get latest news and views related to startups, tech and business

who's online