Khaleej Times

India’s trade deficit narrows as import slide outpaces soft exports in August

- Manoj Kumar Reuters

new delhi — India’s trade deficit narrowed slightly in August, data showed on Thursday, a move that will strengthen the government’s case for rejecting exporters’ calls for a competitiv­e boost through a rupee devaluatio­n.

The trade deficit in the first five months of the current fiscal year has fallen by more than 40 per cent to $34.7 billion, the figures also showed, as a double-digit slide in imports has outpaced a smaller drop in exports.

The positive shift in the terms of trade has helped shield India from slowing global growth and helped it outperform other major emerging economies — its growth rate of more than seven per cent outpacing China’s slowing economy.

Merchandis­e exports contracted by 0.3 per cent year-on-year to $21.5 billion in August, data released by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry showed.

Imports dropped 14.09 per cent to $29.2 billion, helping the trade deficit to narrow to $7.7 billion

Imports dropped 14.09 per cent to $29.2 billion, helping the trade deficit to narrow to $7.7 billion from $7.8 billion. —

from $7.8 billion in the previous month.

India’s gold imports fell for a seventh straight month in August to $1.1 billion as sluggish demand and record high discounts prompted banks and refineries to reduce overseas purchases of bullion. Bloomberg

India’s exports account for just 1.7 per cent of world trade, compared with nearly 12 per cent for China. Prime Minister Narendra Modi wants to grab a five per cent share of global trade by 2020. Analysts doubt that will happen.

Exporters have been lobbying

contractio­n in merchandis­e exports

in August the government and the central bank for a softer currency to support shipments amid sluggish global demand. India’s exports have fallen in all but one of the past 21 months.

On Thursday, the Finance Ministry swatted down a media report of a possible devaluatio­n of the rupee, and said the fall in exports was in line with with a global slowdown in trade.

Last month, Commerce Minister Nirmala Sitharaman called for a 200-basis point interest rate cut, underscori­ng the continuing pressure for monetary easing from voices within the Modi administra­tion.

Meanwhile, services exports in July contracted 4.1 per cent yearon year to $12.8 billion, data released by the central bank showed. —

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