Bellwether data signals revival in manufacturing
GROWTH PATH Manufacturing PMI grew at fastest rate in 5 years in December
NEWDELHI: The Nikkei India manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), a bellwether of economic activity, grew at the fastest rate in five years in December.
Coming in the backdrop of a pickup in merchandise exports and output of eight infrastructure sectors in November, this has stoked expectations of a sustained revival in the economy.
The manufacturing PMI rose to 54.7 in December from 52.6 in the previous month. A reading above 50 denotes expansion and one below it signals contraction. The manufacturing PMI is based on data compiled from monthly replies to questionnaires sent to purchasing executives in over 400 industrial companies in India.
Merchandise exports grew at a six-year high of 30.55% in November while the index for core sectors expanded at its fastest pace in 13 months at 6.8% during the same month.
India’s gross domestic product (GDP) growth accelerated to 6.3% in the September quarter of 2017-18 after dropping to a threeyear low of 5.7% in the June quarter on the back of demonetisation and uncertainty surrounding the implementation of the goods and services tax from July 1.
Most analysts expect economic growth to pick up in 2018 on the back of a continuous global recovery and improved manufacturing activity. The Reserve Bank of India expects growth, as measured by gross value added, to pick up to 7% in the December 2017 quarter and to 7.8% in the March 2018 quarter.
The Central Statistics Office (CSO) will release the first advance estimates of GDP for the current financial year ending March 31, 2018 on Friday, which will act as the benchmark for most indices in the 2018-19 budget to be presented by finance minis- ter Arun Jaitley on February 1.
Madan Sabnavis, chief economist at Care Ratings Ltd, said: “Our projection for the year is 6.7-6.8% based on the assumption of significant acceleration in Q3 and Q4 on the back of 4-4.5% industrial growth for the year.”
Aashna Dodhia, economist at IHS Markit, said India’s goodsproducing economy advanced on its recovery path, with operating conditions improving at the strongest pace since December 2012. “Strong business performance was underpinned by the fastest expansions in output and new orders since December 2012 and October 2016 respectively. Anecdotal evidence pointed to stronger market demand from home and international markets,” Dodhia added.
In November, passenger vehicle sales grew at 14.3%, the fastest pace since July, on the back of a low base effect due to the demonetisation of high-value banknotes in November 2016.
However, sceptics point out the short-lived boom in factory output, which grew more than 4% for two consecutive months in August and September, driven by restocking of warehouses, only to moderate to 2.2% in October.