Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Manufactur­ing grows faster amid high inflation in April

April PMI data points to an improvemen­t in overall operating conditions

- Press Trust of India

NEW DELHI: India’s manufactur­ing sector activities witnessed faster growth in April compared to March amid increases in production and factory orders and renewed expansion in internatio­nal sales, a monthly survey said on Monday.

The seasonally adjusted S&P Global India Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose from 54 in March to 54.7 in April, as the easing of restrictio­ns imposed to contain covid-19 continued to support demand.

A print above 50 means expansion, while a score below 50 denotes contractio­n.

The April PMI data pointed to an improvemen­t in overall operating conditions for the tenth straight month.

“The Indian manufactur­ing PMI remained well inside positive territory during April, recovering some of the ground lost in March.

Factories continued to scale up production at an above-trend pace, with the ongoing increases in sales and input purchasing, suggesting that growth will be sustained in the nearterm,” said Pollyanna De Lima, economics associate director at S&P Global.

April data showed a rebound in new export orders, following the first contractio­n for nine months in March. The rate of increase was solid and the strongest since last July.

Inflationa­ry pressures meanwhile intensifie­d, because of rising commodity prices, the Russia-Ukraine war, and greater transporta­tion costs.

Input prices increased at the fastest pace in five months, while output charge inflation hit a 12-month high.

“A major insight from the latest results was an intensific­ation of inflationa­ry pressures, as energy price volatility, global shortages of inputs and the war in Ukraine pushed up purchasing costs. Companies responded to this by hiking their fees to the greatest extent in one year,” Lima said.

This escalation of price pressures could dampen demand as firms continue to share additional cost burdens with their clients, Lima contended.

On the job front, with capacity pressures among Indian manufactur­ers remaining negligible, shown by a marginal rise in backlogs, there was only a mild increase in employment during April, the survey said. A vast majority of survey participan­ts reported unchanged workforces from March’s levels, it said.

The April data pointed towards improvemen­t in business confidence. However, the overall degree of optimism remained subdued by historical standards.

“Some firms foresee further improvemen­ts in demand and economic conditions, while others noted that the year-ahead outlook was difficult to predict,” the survey said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? The seasonally adjusted S&P Global India Manufactur­ing PMI rose from 54 in March to 54.7 in April as the easing of curbs imposed to contain covid-19 continued to support demand.
REUTERS The seasonally adjusted S&P Global India Manufactur­ing PMI rose from 54 in March to 54.7 in April as the easing of curbs imposed to contain covid-19 continued to support demand.

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