BusinessLine (Bangalore)

CAD dips to 1.2% of GDP in Q3 as services exports rise

Rising secondary income offsets a tad higher trade deficit, too

- K Ram Kumar

India’s current account deficit (CAD) narrowed in the third quarter (Q3FY24) with a rise in services exports and secondary income offsetting the marginally higher merchandis­e trade gap.

CAD narrowed to $10.5 billion (1.2 per cent of GDP) in Q3 (OctoberDec­ember) FY24, lower than $11.4 billion (1.3 per cent of GDP) in the preceding quarter. It narrowed appreciabl­y vis-avis $16.8 billion (2 per cent of GDP) in the year ago quarter.

MERCHANDIS­E TRADE

The merchandis­e trade deficit in Q3, at $71.6 billion, was up a tad than $71.3 billion a year ago.

A 16 per cent yearonyear (yoy) increase in net services receipts to $45 billion ($38,7 billion a year ago) helped cushion the current account deficit.

Net outgo on the primary income account, primarily reflecting payments of investment income, increased to $13.2 billion from $12.7 billion a year ago, per the RBI’s statement on ‘Developmen­ts in India’s Balance of Payments’.

Private transfer receipts, mainly representi­ng remittance­s by Indians employed overseas, amounted to $31.4 billion, an increase of 2.1 per cent over the level in the correspond­ing previous period.

Foreign portfolio investment­s, foreign direct investment­s and nonresiden­t deposits remained robust in the reporting quarter.

FPI INFLOWS UP

FPI recorded a net inflow of $12 billion in Q3, higher than $4.6 billion a year ago. Net FDI flows jumped to $4.2 billion ($2 billion). Nonresiden­t deposits in Q3 rose to $3.9 billion from $2.6 billion a year ago.

External commercial borrowings to India recorded a net outflow of $2.6 billion as compared with a net outflow of $2.5 billion a year ago.

“The current account deficit narrowed in Q3 despite a wider merchandis­e trade deficit, cushioned by a record high services trade surplus and secondary income. Positive FDI and FPI flows kept the BoP (Balance of Payments) in surplus. We expect current account financing needs to remain manageable this fiscal year and the next,” said Rahul Bajoria, Head of EM Asia (exChina) Economics Research, Barclays Investment Bank.

In a report, UBS Securities India said that based on its analysis, the threshold CAD level for India is 2.22.5 per cent of GDP in a steady state, assuming real GDP growth of 67 per cent, with inflation averaging 45 per cent and the cost of external liabilitie­s at 23 per cent, keeping the threshold level of net external liabilitie­s steady.

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