Business Standard

EXPORT BOOST COULD BE LIMITED

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

The weakening rupee might not help our export by much, as currencies of competing nations are depreciati­ng at the same or faster pace. A weaker currency makes export cheaper. Starting the year at 63.8 to the dollar, the rupee has slid over the past six months to the near-69 to the dollar on Thursday. However, it is the same trend with Bangladesh, Indonesia, Vietnam and, most important, China.

“All major currencies of emerging economies are depreciati­ng, with some down at a faster rate. Had it been an exclusivel­y Indian phenomenon, it could have helped our export much more than people expect now,” said Ajay Sahai, director-general of the Federation of Indian Export Organisati­ons.

India's export rise in May was a six-month high of 20.2 per cent, up from 5.7 per cent in April. Total export in 201718 was $302.8 billion, marginally above the government’s target of $300 billion. In 201617, these were $275.8 billion.

On the other hand, import was a record high of $459 billion and the current trend is expected to bloat that bill further. A weaker rupee has historical­ly made import, foreign travel and education more expensive. With India being a net importing nation, with a trade deficit of $156.8 billion last year, a weaker rupee has significan­t repercussi­on. Based on the data for April-May, first two months of this financial year, the current account deficitcou­ld widen to $15-16 billion in the ongoing quarter, from $14 billion in the same period a year before, thinks ratings agency ICRA.

“With industry continuing to face a currency crunch as a result of the goods and services tax, higher import costs will deal a blow to Indian manufactur­ers and exporters which rely on import,” Sahai added. Sectors more sensitive to price changes such as engineerin­g products, readymade goods and automobile­s will also find it hard to deal with the sudden volatility.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India