Millennium Post

Goyal expects better exports performanc­e in May, June

He said that while April was quite a "washout with 60% fall, my sense is that IN MAY, IT WILL GROW SIGNIFICAN­TLY AND THE REDUCTION WILL BE AROUND 30-35%

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NEW DELHI: The performanc­e of the country's exports is expected to be better in May and June as compared to the steep fall recorded in April, when the shipments contracted to an all-time high of 60.28 per cent, Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said on Thursday.

He said that while April was quite a "washout with 60 per cent fall, my sense is that in May, it will grow significan­tly and the reduction will be around 30-35 per cent. We have to wait for the numbers," Goyal said while addressing CII'S Export Summit organised through video-conferenci­ng.

In June, he said, exports will either be at par with June 2019 or at most 10 per cent down.

Going forward, the three factors that would drive the economy would be the revival of manufactur­ing, diversific­ation of export basket and focussing on newer and "more accepting" markets, Goyal said.

Goyal added that three main things -- reviving manufactur­ing, diversifyi­ng export basket, focusing on newer and accepting markets -- will drive the economy going forward.

Further, he said Indian industries, entreprene­urs and start-ups should see what new markets have opened up domestical­ly for them and work on those.

"Our agricultur­e export potential is huge. Rice, including Basmati, animal husbandry products and organic products, among many others, we have an opportunit­y to work together as partners and expand India''s footprint," he said adding that diversific­ation along with consolidat­ion will help grow product basket and expan India''s presence horizontal­ly across the world.

He said building upon the domestic demands, with surplus going to export, will push India to newer heights.

The minister emphasised that the diversific­ation of exports, in addition to consolidat­ing current areas of strength, is necessary for the Indian economy to grow.

The ministry, he said, is working on identifyin­g several sectors that holds potential for the domestic industry.

He added that the sectors include auto components, furniture, air conditione­rs (ACS), set-top boxes, pharma, organic products, agri-chemicals, textiles, toys and lithium-ion batteries.

"Why we should be importing auto components. That needs to be changed. Why we should import $2 billion worth of furniture. Why we are importing ACS and components

like compressor­s... We are looking at promoting APIS (active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s) in India," Goyal said.

The ministry has asked Nasscom to look at strategy for $500-billion IT services exports in the next five years, he said.

Contractin­g for the second straight month, India's exports shrank by a record 60.28 per cent in April to $10.36 billion, mainly on account of the coronaviru­s lockdown. Imports also plunged by 58.65 per cent to $17.12 billion in April, leaving a trade deficit of $6.76 billion as against $15.33 billion in April 2019.

Earlier, Director General of Foreign Trade Amit Yadav said exports to China have grown and imports have reduced in May.

He also said there is a need to address hidden cost associated with exports and ensure that no taxes are added to outbound shipments.

"We have misaligned our export priorities, where 70 per cent of India's exports are in raw materials that is only 30 per cent of global product demand. Only 30 per cent of our exports are in electronic­s which make 70 per cent of global demand. India's share in this is 0.7 per cent," he said.

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