Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Consumptio­n in rural India hits a 7-year low

Farm distress, stagnant incomes erode demand, shows data

- Suneera Tandon suneera.t@livemint.com ■

NEW DELHI: Rural household consumptio­n slumped to a sevenyear low in the September quarter, in a sign that the prolonged agrarian distress and near-stagnant rural incomes have eroded demand for consumer goods, market researcher Nielsen said.

Consumptio­n of packaged consumer goods by rural households also grew at a slower pace than in urban areas for the first time in seven years, Nielsen said in a quarterly report on Thursday.

The rural economy has been plagued by falling crop prices and declining incomes, resulting in a severe slump in demand. Falling income has not only singed farmers but also landless wage workers, who together account for two-thirds of all rural households.

In the September quarter, rural grew at 5% in terms of value, sharply slower than 20% reported in the year earlier. Urban India grew at 8% compared with 14% in the year-ago period. Across urban and rural markets, September quarter growth rates dropped to 7.3% from 16.2% in the year earlier.

Consumptio­n volumes grew 3.9% in the September quarter against 13.2% a year ago. Rural India contribute­s 36% to overall fast-mocing consuer goods (FMCG) spends and has historical­ly been growing around threefive percentage points faster than urban. “In the last seven years, this is the lowest we are seeing from a rural growth perspectiv­e; second is, we have always seen so much potential coming in rural from a commodity to branding perspectiv­e that rural always used to outpace urban from a growth point of view. This is the first time around where we are seeing otherwise,” Sunil Khiani, head of retail measuremen­t services at Nielsen South Asia, said in an interview.

Erratic rainfall in the last three months caused floods in as many as 13 states and worsened the plight of farmers, compoundin­g the slowdown, Khiani said.

Nielsen has, however, retained its annual growth forecast for the FMCG market at 9-10%. In the quarter ended June, Nielsen had cut its earlier growth forecast of 11-12%. Analysts at Nielsen have warned that demand could cool further in the December quarter, before picking up in the three months to April 30. Nielsen tracks consumptio­n of branded fast moving consumer goods in over 80 categories across urban and rural India. The slump in consumptio­n has been hurting packaged goods makers over the last few quarters. Earlier this week, Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HUL), India’s largest household goods maker, said it has not seen an uptick in demand. For the September quarter, HUL’S revenue rose 6.7% to ₹9,852 crore from a year earlier. Sales volume rose just 5% during the period as demand cooled, especially in rural India. “On an overall market basis, the slowdown has happened more in rural areas than in urban. During good times, rural growth used to be 1-1.5 times that of urban in the last four-five years. Now, it has come down to half of urban growth,” Sanjiv Mehta, chairman and managing director of Hindustan Unilever, the local unit of the Anglo-dutch firm, said after announcing the September quarter earnings.

Khiani said the researcher has seen trends in the markets, where shoppers were moving to lower price packs, something reported by several companies.

IN Q2, RURAL GREW AT 5% IN TERMS OF VALUE, SHARPLY SLOWER THAN THE 20% REPORTED IN THE YEAR EARLIER

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