Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

EXPORTS FALL 1.1% IN OCT, TRADE DEFICIT AT 35MTH HIGH

- Asit Ranjan Mishra asit.m@liveminet.com

NEW DELHI: India’s merchandis­e exports declined for the firsttime in 14 months in October as exporters struggled with a liquidity crunch because of delayed refunds under the goods and services tax( G ST) regime, leading to the highest trade deficit in 35 months. Data released by the commerce ministry on Tuesday showed exports fell 1.1% in October to $23.1 billion while imports expanded at the slow est pace in 10 months at 7.6% to $37.1 billion. India’s trade deficit in the month was $14 billion.

The decline had been expected because exporters, particular­ly micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSME), were facing liquidity problem after paying GST for four months in a row without getting any refund, said Ga ne sh Kumar Gupta, president of the Federation of Indian Export Organisati­ons (FIEO).

Gupta said exports should be kept out of the purview of G ST as paying the tax first and getting a refund was cumbersome, complicate­d, affecting exports.

In October, exports of chemicals (22.3%), engineerin­g goods (11.8%) and petroleum products (3.2%) rose while shipments of ready-made garments (-39.2%) gems and jewellery (-24.5%) and drugs and pharma (-8.8%) fell.

Growth in non-oil, non-gold merchandis­e imports eased sharply to 4.9% in October, after double-digit growth since March 2017, led by a substantia­l decline in imports of transport equipment (48%), precious stones (1.6%) and gold (16%). Imports of coal (66.3%), petroleum (27.9%), chemicals (30.5%), plastics (12.2%), iron and steel (20.7%), non-ferrous metals (30.2%), machinery (17.4%), and electronic­s goods (7%) grew in October.

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