Business Standard

Fall in exports likely to narrow in May: Goyal

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

Exports are likely to improve in May, with the contractio­n expected to be 30-35 per cent, said Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal, after outbound shipments crashed by a record 60 per cent in April. Goyal said he expected the fall in exports to narrow to 8-10 per cent in June.

Exports are likely to improve in May, with the contractio­n expected to be 30-35 per cent, said Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal on Thursday, after outbound shipments crashed by a record 60 per cent in April.

Addressing the Digital Summit on Exports organised by the Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII), Goyal said he expects the fall in exports to narrow to 8-10 per cent in June.

Exports had shrunk by a record 60.28 per cent in April and 34.5 per cent in March. The nationwide lockdown shut down manufactur­ing units for 20 days in April, but experts had pointed to the March figures as clear evidence of growing stress in the sector given that units were open till 25 March.

In April, 28 of the 30 major product groups saw the highest-ever contractio­n of up to 99 per cent. Even large quantities of petroleum products could not push exports value-wise as internatio­nal prices were at rock bottom. Policymake­rs, however, worry that the knock-on effects of April’s historical­ly low exports may cut short outbound trade in FY21 as the March-june period is crucial in the export cycle for many sectors such as apparels and engineerin­g goods.

On Thursday, G oyal asked domestic industry to scale up investment­s and seize the opportunit­y to grow fast once the current crisis ends. He reiterated that domestic consumptio­n will anchor industrial developmen­t and exports.

India has a huge opportunit­y to promote indigenous production in auto component, furniture, air conditione­rs, and other sectors, he said. The government is already promoting electronic­s production and the manufactur­ing of Active Pharmaceut­ical Ingredient­s.

Taking note of the fact that services exports did not fall by a wide margin since the beginning of the pandemic, apart from in the hospitalit­y and tourism sectors, Goyal said he had asked Nasscom to craft a strategy for $500 billion worth of Informatio­n Technology services exports in the next five years. He said consistent efforts were on to diversify the exports basket, and find newer and more accepting markets.

Speaking at the same event, held through video conferenci­ng, Director General of Foreign Trade Amit Yadav said 70 per cent of exports continued to be in raw materials, the trade of which remain susceptibl­e to price shocks and supply volatility. These items also command only 30 per cent of the global product demand. He emphasised the need for state as well as district-level export policies and action plans going forward.

However, the government expects the Covid-19 pandemic to cause major supply chain disruption­s that would push the localisati­on of production of essential commoditie­s, at least for certain commoditie­s, said P Harish, additional secretary at the external affairs ministry.

This was echoed by David Rasquinha, Managing Director, EXIM Bank of India, who said India can’t be too dependent on any single source for managing supply chains.

Goyal said he had asked Nasscom to craft a strategy for $500 billion worth of IT services exports in the next five years

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