Business Standard

Raw materials continue to top list of India’s exports to China

Tough talk on Chinese goods in FY20 leads to lower imports, narrowing trade gap

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

Ev en as shipments of high- value manufactur­ed goods to China saw an uptick in the fiscal year 2019-20 (FY20), raw materials continue to dominate India’s top exports to the neighbouri­ng country.

Though the government has been pushing for exports of high-value manufactur­ed goods across major markets in place of raw materials and input goods, India’s top exports to China remain in the raw materials category, shows the latest data released by the commerce department for FY20.

Apart from organic chemicals and processed petroleum, most of the top shipments to China comprised raw materials, despite traditiona­l export items such as raw plastic and cotton seeing a decline. Notably, shipments of iron ore shot up to $2.3 billion in FY20, up from $950 million in the previous financial year.

However, at the same time, key sectors being pushed by India, such as medical devices and electrical equipment, continue to see slow but steady rise in exports to China. “Due to the sudden changes in the bilateral trade brought on by the global Covid-19 pandemic, shipments of machinery saw a marginal decline, while regulatory hur

dles on Beijing’s part restricted the exports of pharmaceut­ical goods,” said a senior commerce department official.

“China has been very effectivel­y using non-tariff barriers to curb imports that it wants to avoid. On the other hand, it also uses these restrictio­ns as a political tool to control bilateral relations,” said Biswajit Dhar, senior trade policy expert and professor at the Jawaharlal Nehru University.

A report by the Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII) has pointed out that since 2012, China’s exports have increasing­ly moved up the value chain, with accelerate­d growth in high-technology items, such as telecommun­ications equipment, automotive products, cellphones, etc.

The government’s move to expand

Imports go down

the export basket to China, especially in the agricultur­e segment also seemed to have paid off. Apart from high-value pepper and coffee, shipments of marine products rose to $1.3 billion.

Amid calls for boycott of Chinese goods following the recent military stand-off at the Line of Actual Control in Ladakh, imports from China have declined for the second year straight to $65.26 billion, narrowing the trade deficit to $48.6 billion in FY20. However, while the trade deficit shrank to a five-year low, the rate of closing the gap faltered in the previous financial year.

Case in point, India had managed to shave the trade deficit by $9.48 billion in 2018-19, but it managed to reduce the same by only $4.9 billion in 2019-20.

However, with widespread anger at the Chinese administra­tion for hiding the extent of the pandemic as well as geopolitic­al shifts forcing major manufactur­ers to move facilities out of China, the trade deficit may continue to narrow, say experts.

In FY20, all key imports from China saw a decline. Imports of mobile phones and their components — the largest single area of imports — saw the biggest drop at $5.47 billion in the latest year, down from $7.22 billion in FY19 and $15.4 billion in FY18.

The Centre has over the past three years strategica­lly increased incentives to boost component manufactur­ing through various schemes.

In the latest year, imports of printed circuit boards, displays and batteries also fell.

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