Millennium Post

Exports plunge by record 60.28% to $10.36 bn in April

This is the lowest trade deficit since May 2016, when it had stood at $6.27 billion

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NEW DELHI: Contractin­g for the second straight month, India's exports shrank by a record 60.28 per cent in April to $ 10.36 billion, mainly on account of the Coronaviru­s

lockdown, official data showed on Friday.

Imports too plunged by 58.65 per cent to $ 17.12 billion in April, leaving a trade deficit of $ 6.76 billion as against $ 15.33 billion in April 2019, according to the data by the commerce and industry ministry.

This is the lowest trade deficit since May 2016, when it had stood at $ 6.27 billion.

The country's exports had declined by 34.57 per cent in March 2020.

“The decline in exports has been mainly due to the ongoing global slowdown, which got aggravated due to the current Covid-19 crisis. The latter resulted in large scale disruption­s in supply chains and demand resulting in cancel

lation of orders,” the ministry said in a statement.

Barring iron ore and pharmaceut­icals, all the remaining 28 key sectors registered negative growth in the month under review.

Gems and jewellery shipments declined 98.74 per cent, followed by leather (93.28 per cent), petroleum products (- 66.22 per cent), engineerin­g goods (- 64.76 per cent), and chemicals (- 42 per cent) .

Oil imports in April were $ 4.66 billion, which was 59.03 per cent lower as compared to the same month last year.

All 30 key imports sectors like gold, silver, transport equipment, coal, fertiliser, machinery and machine tools posted negative growth during the month.

Non-oil imports fell 58.5 per cent to $ 12.46 billion in April. Gold imports stood at $ 2.83 million, as against $ 4 billion in April 2019.

The nationwide lockdown to contain the spread of the Coronaviru­s outbreak began on March 25, shutting industrial units and restrictin­g movement of goods.

Commenting on the numbers, Federation of Indian Export Organisati­ons (FIEO) said it is “highest-ever” decline in monthly exports, and demanded an incentive package from the government.

Federation of Indian Export Organisati­ons President Sharad Kumar Saraf said the

lockdowns around the world have not only pushed business sentiment to the lowest levels but also impacted supply chains and economic growth.

“We may expect revival in exports from the third quarter of the fiscal, depending on the condition evolving in the internatio­nal market.

“With major global players including the US, UK, Canada, Japan, Germany, France, Austria, Spain, and Bangladesh having provided bailout or financial packages to their industry to sail through these difficult times, it is also expected that the same would help in bringing good news for the overall internatio­nal trade,” Saraf said.

Since 2011-12, India's exports have been hovering around the $ 300 billion mark. During 2017-18, the overseas shipments grew by about 10 per cent to $ 303 billion and further to $ 330.08 billion in 2018-19 and $ 314.31 billion in 2019-20.

The drop in exports is in sync with the projection­s of the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO), which has stated that world trade is expected to fall between 13 per cent and 32 per cent in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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