Business Standard

EXPORTS GROW 45% IN AUG; TRADE DEFICIT AT 4-MONTH HIGH

High demand for engineerin­g and fuel items, gems & jewellery led to growth

- SHREYA NANDI New Delhi, 2 September

India exported goods worth $33.14 billion in August, up 45.17 per cent on-year, as demand continued to remain robust from other countries, revealed the preliminar­y data released by the commerce and industry ministry. Outbound shipments were dominated by higher demand for items such as engineerin­g and petroleum products, gems and jewellery. The 45-per cent growth can also be partially attributed to a low base in August 2020 due to disruption caused by Covid-19. However, the base effect is on the wane.

India exported goods worth $33.14 billion in August, up 45.17 per cent on-year, as demand continued to remain robust from other countries, revealed the preliminar­y data released by the commerce and industry ministry.

Outbound shipments were dominated by higher demand for items such as engineerin­g and petroleum products, gems and jewellery. The 45-per cent growth can also be partially attributed to a low base in August 2020 due to disruption caused by Covid-19. However, the base effect is on the wane.

Even as growth witnessed 2 per cent decline on a sequential basis, compared to August 2019, it was still 27.5 per cent. Outbound shipments hit an alltime high of $35.17 billion in July.

On a cumulative basis, India’s merchandis­e exports in April-august were $163.67 billion, up 66.92 per cent on-year and up 22.93 per cent, compared to the same period in 2019. This translates into India achieving 41 per cent of its export target of $400 billion for the current fiscal year. Merchandis­e imports grew 51.5 per cent in August to 47.01 billion, up 17.9 per cent, compared to August 2019. This resulted in a trade deficit of $13.87 billion in August, compared to a trade deficit of $8.2 billion during the same time period a year ago.

“With merchandis­e imports continuing to scale up, even as exports receded from their alltime high, trade deficit widened to a higher-thanantici­pated $13.9 billion in August, marking a four-month high. We expect the current account to record a modest deficit of $4-6 billion in the ongoing quarter,” said Aditi Nayar, chief economist, ICRA. “...Unless a weaker agricultur­al outlook restrains demand, gold imports may well touch $40 billion in 2021-22,” said Nayar.

The value of non-petroleum and non-gems and jewellery exports in August was $25.15 billion, up 31.66 per cent onyear, and witnessed a 28.53-per cent jump in August 2019. In the case of imports of non-oil, non-gold, silver, and precious metals, growth was 34 per cent on-year at $26.36 bn, but had a marginal positive growth of 2.6 per cent over August 2019.

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