Deccan Chronicle

Note ban blues in India Inc’s output

Production sees huge dip in December

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New Delhi, Feb. 10: Demonetisa­tion took a toll on industrial activity as output contracted to four-month low of 0.4 per cent last December with consumer durables taking the worst hit, plummeting by over 10 per cent due to cash crunch.

The factory output had contracted 0.9 per cent in December 2015.

The latest decline reflected deteriorat­ion in the manufactur­ing sector on account of cash crunch following the scrapping of the `500 and `1000 notes on November 8, 2016.

The industrial output was 5.7 per cent in November and did not capture the impact of demonetisa­tion.

Finance minister Arun Jaitley said the contractio­n in industrial production in December was due to fallout of demonetisa­tion but expected a pick-up and greater expansion in the coming months.

“November and December (IIP figure) cannot be the representa­tive of period of this year. This is the demonetisa­tion period and compared to November, December was more challengin­g for the reason that in many areas old currency was allowed to operate. In December it had gone away,” he said.

Factory output measured in terms of Index of Industrial Production in December declined on account of 2 per cent contractio­n in manufactur­ing sector, as against 1.9 per cent decline a year ago.

According to the data, the previous low was a contractio­n of 0.7 per cent in August.

During the AprilDecem­ber period of the current fiscal, IIP growth remained almost flat at 0.3 per cent compared to 3.2 per cent growth in the nine month period of 2015-16.

Output of consumer durables segment - TVs, refrigerat­ors and washing machines - declined by 10.3 per cent during the month under review from robust growth of 16.6 per cent reflecting the impact of currency crunch.

The consumer nondurable mainly including FMCG items too contracted by 5 per cent in December, as against a contractio­n of 2.7 per cent year ago.

Overall consumer goods output showed a contractio­n of 6.8 per cent compared to growth of 3.2 per cent in December 2015.

Capital goods segment, barometer of investment­s, declined by 3 per cent as against 18.6 per cent decline in December 2015.

As per use-based classifica­tion, the growth rates are 5.3 per cent in basic goods and (-)1.2 per cent in intermedia­te goods.

However, the power generation showed a growth of 6.3 per cent in December compared to 3.2 per cent in the same month a year.

The mining output also grew by 5.2 per cent in December compared to 2.8 per cent in the same month year ago.

Overall, 17 out of 22 industry groups in the manufactur­ing sector have shown negative growth in December.

This is the demonetisa­tion period and compared to November, December was more challengin­g for the reason that in many areas old currency was allowed to operate.

— ARUN JAITLEY

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