Business Standard

India’s exports hit six-month high

Trade deficit widens as imports zoom 14.85%

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

A rise in receipts of petroleum, engineerin­g and pharmaceut­ical products boosted May’s export growth figures to a six-month high of 20.18 per cent, up from 5.71 per cent in April.

Even then the trade deficit widened to a four-month high of $14.62 billion, compared to the $13.7 billion deficit in April as imports rose by 14.85 per cent during the month, compared to the 4.60 per cent rise in April. This could pressurise the current account deficit in the first quarter of the current financial year after it stood at 1.9 per cent of GDP in the fourth quarter of 201718, compared to 2.1 per cent in the third quarter.

However, within exports, major labour-intensive sectors, such as gems and jewellery and ready-made garments, continued to see declines, which might affect jobs.

The export growth rate had peaked at over 30 per cent in November last year. Since then, the rate has fallen continuous­ly until March. However, growth in outbound trade strengthen­ed in May, with India exporting goods worth $28.86 billion.

After major refining units remained shut for over two months, India finally managed to take advantage of rising global crude oil prices in May when petroleum exports rose by over 104 per cent to $5.23 billion. It had declined by 4.48 per cent in April.

The same rising oil prices led to a much higher import bill of $43.48 billion in May. A major part of this was due to the $11.5 billion crude oil import bill, which jumped nearly 50 per cent, up from the 41 per cent rise in April.

The cost of overall oil imports is expected to grow in coming months. Experts predict that India’s oil bill will continue to rise in the current financial year as external pressures, such as the fallout of the Iran deal and a possible cut in production by oil producers, might heat up prices.

The aftershock­s of the ~140-billion Nirav Modi scam continued to affect the gems and jewellery sector. Gold imports fell by a large margin. Imports reduced by 29.85 per cent in May to $3.48 billion although the rate of fall decreased from 33.05 per cent in the previous month. However, non-oil and non-gold imports, denoting domestic industrial demand, jumped 13.09 per cent. It had fallen by 0.14 per cent in the preceding month, after rising continuous­ly in the few months before. It had risen by 12.2 per cent in March and 7.28 per cent in February. The rise in May might affect the index of industrial production, which rose 4.9 per cent in April.

“The growth of non-oil non-gold merchandis­e imports rebounded to double-digits in May 2018, driven by inputs such as iron and steel, non ferrous metals, fertilizer­s, chemicals, coal, machinery and transport equipment.” Aditi Nayar, Principal Economist at ICRA said.

As a result of low inbound gold shipments, gems and jewellery exports contracted 6.47 per cent, which was lower than the 16.95 per cent fall in April. On Friday, Commerce and Industry Minister Suresh Pabhu said the sector continued to suffer from unavailabi­lity of bank credit. He added the government was working towards resolving the situation.

Apparel exports dropped by 16.62 per cent in May. While the rate of contractio­n has slowed from 22.76 per cent in April, experts pointed out that the sector had seen a downturn since last October.

Engineerin­g goods exports rose by 14.77 per cent in May to ship out merchandis­e worth $7.14 billion, down from the 17 per cent rise in April. Pharma exports rose by 25.67 per cent, building on the 13.56 per cent rise in the previous month.

“MSME sectors are still facing the liquidity crunch as banks and lending agencies have continuous­ly been tightening their lending norms, as reflected in sharp reduction in exports credit, which does not augur well for their exports.” Ganesh Kumar Gupta, President of the Federation of Indian Exports Organizati­on said. Of the 30 major product groups, 23 recorded growth in May, up from the 16 a month ago.

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