Hindustan Times (West UP)

Trade deficit widens to $12.9 billion in Feb

- Asit Ranjan Mishra asit.m@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: India’s merchandis­e exports contracted in February after two successive months of positive growth amid rising concerns over a potential second wave of coronaviru­s pandemic and delay in implementi­ng a tax reimbursem­ent scheme for exporters.

Preliminar­y data released by the commerce ministry on Tuesday showed exports fell 0.25% while imports picked up pace to grow at 7% leading to a trade deficit of $12.9 billion.

During April-February period, merchandis­e exports contracted 12.32% while merchandis­e imports fell 23.1% resulting in $151.4 billion of trade deficit.

In February, exports of petroleum products (-27%), gems and jewellery (-11%) and engineerin­g goods (-2.6%) fell while shipments of pharma products rose around 15%. Among major import items, petroleum (-16.6), transport equipment (-23%) fell while imports of gold (124%), electronic goods (38%), chemicals (37.6%) shot up significan­tly.

India’s merchandis­e trade had been weakening even before the pandemic hit the economy and external demand. Exports were negative in 16 of the past 20 months starting June 2019. Since March 2020, both exports and imports started declining in high double digits, even temporaril­y leading to a trade surplus in June for the first time in 18 years.

Aditi Nayar, principal economist at ICRA Ltd said the reduction of import duty on gold in the FY22 budget announceme­nt led gold imports to surge to the highest level in February since November 2014. “With gold imports remaining elevated for the last three months, we now expect that the total value of shipments in FY21 may modestly exceed the level of $28.2 billion seen in FY20. We expect the merchandis­e trade deficit to print at $12.5-13.5 billion in March 2021, resulting in a current account deficit of under $5 billion in that quarter,” she added.

Indian economy recovered in the December quarter to expand at 0.4% after two successive quarters of historic contractio­n induced by the coronaviru­s pandemic, signalling that Asia’s third largest economy may be on a path of slow but sustained recovery. For FY21, however, government’s statistics office now estimates deeper contractio­n of 8% than earlier estimate of 7.7% contractio­n.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? India’s exports fell 0.25% in February, while imports picked up pace to grow at 7%, causing the trade deficit to widen.
BLOOMBERG India’s exports fell 0.25% in February, while imports picked up pace to grow at 7%, causing the trade deficit to widen.

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