Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Core sector output falls to-5.2%,worstin14y­rs

- Gireesh Chandra Prasad and Utpal Bhaskar

All infra industries, barring fertilizer­s, contract in Sep

NEW DELHI: The bad news on the Indian economy just got worse. The core infrastruc­ture industries’ output—measuring a basket of eight sectors accounting for two-fifths of India’s factory output—contracted to the lowest in at least 14 years, pointing to a deepening industrial slowdown.

The gauge contracted by 5.2% in September from a growth of 4.3% in the year-ago period, according to data released by the commerce and industry ministry on Thursday.

The developmen­t strengthen­s the case for the central bank to continue its monetary stimulus, experts said. With inflation likely to remain within the central bank’s target range in the near term, another rate cut in the December monetary policy review is a near certainty, said Sunil Kumar Sinha, principal economist at India Ratings.

“Such a low growth in core sector industries has not been witnessed so far in either the 2011-12 base or the 2004-05 base series. This clearly indicates the severity of the ongoing industrial slowdown,” said Sinha.

Barring fertilizer­s, where the output improved by 5.4% in September, the other seven infrastruc­ture industries witnessed a contractio­n. Coal was the worst performer on account of an extended monsoon, a surge in renewable energy supply and labour issues at state-run Coal India Ltd. Output contracted by 20.5% in September, compared to an 8.6% decline in the previous month and a 6.4% expansion in the year-ago period. Coal also accounts for a substantia­l share of the freight moved by the Indian Railways and the country’s power generation capacity. Of India’s installed capacity of 360 gigawatts, 54% is coal-fuelled.

Data showed that production of key primary sources of energy such as crude oil and coal as well as refined petroleum products and electricit­y took a beating.

Energy consumptio­n, especially electricit­y and refinery products, is usually linked to overall demand in the economy. State-run Indian Oil Corp. Ltd (IOC) on Thursday reported an 83% drop in its second quarter profit at ₹564 crore on the back of a slump in refinery margins and inventory losses. IOC chairman Sanjiv Singh said diesel consumptio­n grew by only 1% in the first six months of the current fiscal amid the worst slump in almost two decades in the automobile sector.

Earlier this month, official data showed that industrial output had contracted 1.1% in August, its worst performanc­e in 26 months. India’s economic growth rate had slowed down to a more than five-year low of 5% in the June quarter.

The Narendra Modi administra­tion has taken a series of steps to reverse the trend, including a cut in the corporate tax rate in September from 30% to 22% for companies not availing of any tax breaks and from 25% to 15% for new manufactur­ers.

On a cumulative basis for the first half of the fiscal too, the performanc­e of the eight core sectors remained dismal, with a growth of 1.3% as against 5.5% during the correspond­ing period a year ago.

Experts agreed that seven out of the eight core industries showing a contractio­n was a worrying signal, but said the trend could be reversed in a few months.

“Electricit­y demand is linked to factory output. An improvemen­t in industrial production will lead to a turnaround in electricit­y generation,” said Debasish Mishra, partner at Deloitte India. “We expect a reversal of this trend by the middle of next year on account of the steps the government has taken so far.”

Data showed that crude oil production contracted 5.4% in September in continuati­on of the trend for the last one year, while natural gas output contracted for the sixth month on the trot to 4.9%. Electricit­y output contracted 3.7%, its second straight month of contractio­n. Cement production contracted 2.1%, indicating the continued weakness in constructi­on activities. Refinery products contracted 6.7% after a 2.6% growth in the previous month. Fertilizer output showed steady growth for the fourth month to 5.4%.

Source: DIPP, CGA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India