Business Standard

Rising imports spark demand revival debate

Growth in non-oil, non-gold imports sees a spurt

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y New Delhi, 25 July

Imports continued to rise at a robust pace for the 10th month in June, fuelling hope among some experts that industrial demand was back on track.

This, however, was not the universal opinion, even as nonoil, non-gold imports — often considered an indicator of domestic industrial demand — have been clocking strong growth rates.

Imports rose 19 per cent in June over the correspond­ing month last year, with inbound shipments totalling $36.52 billion. This was significan­tly high despite being slower than 33.1 per cent growth in imports in May.

“Import growth data has remained strong, indicating a robust increase in domestic demand,” Morgan Stanley India said in a research note. “This has been corroborat­ed by other high-frequency growth indicators.” The global financial services major added that imports of capital goods accelerate­d 8 per cent in June, and those of machine tools, machinery, and transport equipment also Dec ‘16 Jan ‘17 Feb ‘17 Mar ‘17 Apr ‘17 May ‘17 Jun ‘17 19.83 picked up. Among imports, the crucial non-oil, non-gold imports segment continued to post strong double-digit growth of 16.7 per cent in the month.

However, there was huge volatility in non-oil, non-gold imports. It was 43 per cent in April but 19.83 per cent in May. This has been pointed out by experts to argue that industrial demand might not be back on the growth path.

“This segment is still witnessing a significan­t amount of volatility. It would be wrong to assume that industrial demand is firmly in place based on the readings of the past couple of months,” said D K Shrivastav, chief policy advisor at EY.

Also, the latest Index of Industrial Production data, available for May, has shown a muted growth of 1.7 per cent compared with 3.1 per cent in the previous month and 3.7 per cent in March, he added.

“In our view, there is limited evidence of a broad-based revival in private sector capex,” Aditi Nayar, principal economist at Icra, said. In June, much of the push to imports came from gold, which more than doubled to $2.5 billion in June year-on-year, she said.

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