Business Standard

Manufactur­ing growth falls to 5-month low

JOB GENERATION FALLS FOR FIRST TIME IN EIGHT MONTHS GDP GROWTH PROJECTION SCALED DOWN TO 7.3% FOR FY19

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

Growth in manufactur­ing slowed to a five-month low in March, recording the smallest improvemen­t in operating conditions since October 2017, showed the widely tracked Nikkei purchasing managers’ index (PMI). The PMI fell to 51 in March from 52.1 in February. A reading above 50 shows expansion. This, coupled with a weak outlook ahead, prompted the compiler of the PMI survey — IHS Markit — to scale down its growth projection from 7.4 per cent to 7.3 per cent for 2018-19.

Growth in manufactur­ing slowed to a five-month low in March, recording the smallest improvemen­t in operating conditions since October 2017, showed the widely-tracked Nikkei purchasing managers’ index (PMI).

The PMI fell to 51 in March from 52.1 in February. A reading above 50 shows expansion. This, coupled with a weak outlook ahead, prompted the compiler of the PMI survey — IHS Markit — to scale down its growth projection from 7.4 per cent to 7.3 per cent for 2018-19.

The Economic Survey has pegged growth at 7-7.5 per cent for the year, while multilater­al agencies have projected it to be 7.2 per cent. With firms’ capacity lying idle, companies have lowered their payroll numbers for the first time in eight months, albeit moderately. Goods manufactur­ers raised their output for the eighth successive month in March. However, the rate of rise was the weakest since October.

Whatever higher production occurred is mainly linked to new order growth and favourable demand conditions, the survey pointed out. Growth was reported in all three broad market groups, led by consumptio­n goods. New businesses placed with manufactur­ing companies rose for the fifth consecutiv­e month in March. Where an increase was registered, firms linked this to improvemen­ts in demand in both the domestic and internatio­nal markets.

That said, the rate of growth eased to the weakest pace in the current sequence, reflecting the slowest gain in new export orders since November. New export orders rose during March, thereby marking a five-month period of growth. “The impact of US tariffs on steel and aluminium on India is expected to be limited because India’s exports in both metals to the US accounted for less than 0.4 per cent of merchandis­e exports. On a negative note, further advances in trade disputes could potentiall­y weigh on sales to internatio­nal clients,” Aashna Dodhia, economist at IHS Markit and author of the report, said.

While input inflation moderated in March compared to February, the rate of rise in output prices reached an eightmonth high. Optimism for the next 12 months remained below the series average even as manufactur­ing firms retained business confidence. China, with which India is often compared, had better manufactur­ing performanc­e in March.

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