Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

India’s trade deficit at 25-month high in Dec

- Asit Ranjan Mishra

NEW DELHI: India’s trade deficit widened to a 25-month high in December as growth in merchandis­e imports outpaced exports, signalling a pickup in domestic demand after the pandemic devastated Asia’s thirdlarge­st economy.

Imports expanded 7.56% last month, the first time in 10 months, while exports grew 0.14%—leaving a trade deficit of $15.44 billion, according to data released by the commerce ministry on Friday.

China’s exports, in contrast, rose 18.1% in December, the fastest growth since February 2018, while imports grew 6.5%, leading to a record trade surplus of $78.17 billion.

Major Indian exports that helped India’s outbound shipments turn the corner include gems and jewellery (6.75%), drugs and pharmaceut­icals (17.5%), chemicals (10.8%), engineerin­g goods (0.3%) and electronic goods (16.5%). A sharp contractio­n in readymade garments (-15%) and petroleum products (-35.4%) kept overall exports growth minimal.

The rise in imports was led by gold (81.8%), vegetable oils (43.5%), chemicals (23.3%), artificial resins (32.3%), pearls (7.81%), iron and steel (12.7%), non-ferrous metal (28.1%), machinery (0.57%) and electronic goods (20.9%).

Aditi Nayar, principal economist at ICRA Ltd, said she is hopeful exports will strengthen in the coming months as the Covid-19 vaccine rollout gathers pace in India’s major trading partners.

“As the economic activity has normalised, the merchandis­e trade deficit has enlarged by $20 billion to $34 billion in Q3 FY21 from $14 billion in Q2 FY21. Accordingl­y, we expect the size of the current account surplus to shrink to under $2 billion in Q3 FY21, and the re-emergence of a small deficit can’t be ruled out at this point,” she added.

India’s merchandis­e trade had been weakening even before the pandemic hit the economy and external demand. In 15 of the past 18 months starting June 2019, exports have been negative.

Since March 2020, both exports and imports started declining in high double digits, even temporaril­y leading to a trade surplus in June for the first time in 18 years.

Data compiled by the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) showed global merchandis­e trade declined by 21% in the June quarter. WTO now projects volume of world merchandis­e trade to decline 9.2% in 2020, followed by a 7.2% rise in 2021. In April, it had projected global merchandis­e trade to drop by 13% to 32% in 2020 because of Covid.

The Indian economy is officially projected to contract by a record 7.7% in FY21 for the first time in 41 years with the National Statistica­l Organisati­on, assuming 0.6% growth in the second half (Octobermar­ch) of FY21.

CHINA’S EXPORTS, IN CONTRAST, ROSE 18.1% IN DECEMBER, THE FASTEST GROWTH SINCE FEBRUARY 2018

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