What the mini-run on the rupee says about India THE result of headless-chicken financial markets or a canary in the coal mine? India is grappling with this question. On November 22nd the rupee fell to an all-time low against the dollar. The speed of the rout (see chart) has been scary for a place that was supposed to be largely insulated from the rich worldās troubles. It is 20 years since India had a balance-of-payments crisis and for a long time the talk has been about it becoming an economic superpower. But there lingers a memory of when it felt it was a financial hostage to the world, and this helps explain the whiff of panic now in the air. Mumbaiās financial types say that firms are scrambling to find dollars and that desperate euro-zone banks, which supply about half of Indiaās foreign loans, are cutting off credit lines. That sense of fear strikes some as overdone. Jonathan Anderson, of UBS, a bank, has tagged the rupee a ādrama queenā. India...
Trying my hand on the betwixt and between moments of the life