Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Manufactur­ingpmislow­sinaug due to rise in input prices, Covid

The seasonally adjusted index stood at 52.3 in Aug, down from 55.3 in July

- Press Trust of India

NEW DELHI: India’s manufactur­ing sector activities moderated in August, as business orders and production rose at softer rates due to the pandemic and rising input costs, a monthly survey said on Wednesday.

The seasonally adjusted IHS Markit India Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) stood at 52.3 in August, down from 55.3 in July, indicating a softer rate of growth that was subdued and below its long-run average.

The August PMI data pointed to an improvemen­t in overall operating conditions for the second straight month. In PMI parlance, a print above 50 means expansion while a score below 50 denotes contractio­n.

“August saw a continuati­on of the Indian manufactur­ing sector recovery, but growth lost momentum as demand showed some signs of weakness due to the pandemic. Yet, factory orders and output rose across the consumer, intermedia­te and investment goods categories,” Pollyanna De Lima, Economics Associate director at IHS Markit, said.

A softer upturn in sales led companies to pause their hiring efforts, with business confidence dampened by concerns surroundin­g the damaging impact of Covid-19 on demand and firms’ finances, the survey said.

“Uncertaint­y regarding growth prospects, spare capacity and efforts to keep a lid on expenses led to a hiring freeze in August, following the first upturn in employment for 16 months in July,” Lima said.

August data pointed to backto-back increases in new export orders, but here too growth lost momentum.

The pace of expansion was only marginal.

Indian manufactur­ers signalled another monthly rise in cost burdens, thereby taking the current stretch of inflation to 13 months. The rate of increase softened, but remained elevated by historical standards. Cost pressures were linked by survey members to raw material scarcity and transporta­tion problems.

“Charges levied by manufactur­ers rose as some firms shared part of their additional cost burdens with clients, although to a lesser degree than selling prices. Input prices increased sharply, due to strong competitio­n for scarce raw materials and transporta­tion issues,” Lima said.

Lima further noted that “the 12-month outlook for production remained positive, though confidence faded amid worries concerning the lasting scars of the pandemic and the adverse impact of rising costs on companies’ finances parallel to a lack of pricing power.” On the macroecono­mic front, the Indian economy grew by a record 20.1% in the April-june quarter, helped by a very weak base of last year and a sharp rebound in the manufactur­ing and services sectors in spite of a devastatin­g second wave of Covid-19.

Meanwhile, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Shaktikant­a Das on Tuesday said that the RBI will conduct fine-tuning operations to manage unanticipa­ted and one-off liquidity flows to ensure balanced liquidity conditions in the system.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Indian manufactur­ers signalled another monthly rise in cost burdens, thereby taking the current stretch of inflation to 13 months.
REUTERS Indian manufactur­ers signalled another monthly rise in cost burdens, thereby taking the current stretch of inflation to 13 months.

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