💸 “From Stability to Rupee Disaster: How bjp Blew ₹45 to ₹88 While indians Paid the Price”




🔥 Intro

The indian Rupee has taken a nosedive under bjp rule, leaving citizens paying more for everything from essentials to imported goods. Compare this with the 2000–2010 period, when ₹45 held its ground against the dollar despite global ups and downs.

Numbers don’t lie:


  • 2000: ₹45.68

  • 2010: ₹45.71 ✅ Stable, robust, resilient

  • 2020: ₹74.13 ⚠️ Depreciation begins

  • 2025: ₹88.06 💀 Citizens’ wallets burning



1️⃣ 2000–2010: Stability & Growth

  • GDP growth: 7–8% average

  • Forex reserves: $40B → $300B

  • RBI interventions: active and effective

  • Inflation: controlled

  • Foreign investments: rising

💡 Result: Rupee held firm, economy grew, people benefitted.



2️⃣ Post-2010: bjp Rule = Rupee Freefall

  • 2010–2025: ₹45 → ₹88

  • Trade deficit: widening

  • Inflation: rising

  • oil prices & global USD strength: mismanaged

  • Domestic fiscal policies: poor control

💥 Result: Ordinary indians pay double for imports, traveling abroad becomes expensive, and inflation bites harder.



3️⃣ Why This Matters

The exchange rate reflects economic health. A weak rupee inflates prices, erodes savings, and punishes the common man while elites with foreign assets barely notice.



4️⃣ Rupee vs. Governance

Stable 2000–2010 rupee = stable governance, growth, liberalized economy.
BJP era = policy missteps, mismanagement, poor fiscal discipline = currency collapse.



5️⃣ Every indian Feels the Burn

₹88 = higher petrol, groceries, electronics, and education costs.
Rupee depreciation under the bjp isn’t just numbers—it’s citizen suffering.



6️⃣ Global Factors Excuse? Weak Logic

Yes, global issues exist (Eurozone crisis, Fed tapering, oil prices), but strong policy, reserves, and interventions can stabilize currency. india had it before; now it doesn’t.



💥 Closing Punch

The rupee’s journey from ₹45 to ₹88 under bjp rule isn’t just math — it’s a shameful indictment of policy failure. Citizens pay, elites benefit, and the “strong economy” narrative crumbles with every rising exchange rate.

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