financetom
Economy
financetom
/
Economy
/
Commerce Secretary optimistic of changing weather after India's August trade data shows exports losing steam
News World Market Environment Technology Personal Finance Politics Retail Business Economy Cryptocurrency Forex Stocks Market Commodities
Commerce Secretary optimistic of changing weather after India's August trade data shows exports losing steam
Sep 5, 2022 2:56 AM

A contraction in exports coupled with a high import bill has renewed concerns over India's widening trade deficit and its impact on the broader economy. However, according to Commerce Secretary BVR Subrahmanyam, the government expects exports to pick up, going forward.

Share Market Live

NSE

The optimism is based on new opportunities as economies in the West diversify their imports away from China, he said, adding the trade deals with UAE and Australia were expected to bear fruit soon.

For the first five months of this fiscal year (April-August), exports totalled USD 192.6 billion, while imports stood at USD 317.8 billion, leaving India with a record trade deficit of USD 125.2 billion, or nearly two and half times the level in the same period a year ago. In April-August last year, the trade deficit stood at USD 53.8 billion.

Speaking to CNBC-TV18 after the data release, Subrahmanyam said, “Exports are not down, exports in the month of August are flat; what they were last year. Every month last year, we were breaking records already. So the August figures last year were already at a high.”

Also Read: Revving exports to US keeps India in race to be next China

The sharp deterioration in the export-import imbalance has come on the back of several developments that include the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war that caused a huge spike in global oil and commodity prices, supply chain bottlenecks due to the slow easing of COVID restrictions in China and pent-up demand for imports as the manufacturing sector recovered from the pandemic's shadow.

The export fall comes as the oil import bill balloons. India spent about USD 99 billion on oil imports in April-August, more than the USD 62 billion spent in the entire 2020-21 (April 2020 to March 2021) fiscal and more than half of the USD 120.4 billion spending in 2021-22 fiscal. While India is 85 percent dependent on imports to meet its oil needs, a domestic coal crisis also forced the tapping of overseas supplies of dry fuel for meeting the power demand during peak summer.

“We took some measures to control inflation, enable adequate supply domestically, largely in the areas of food for food security. So we put some restrictions on wheat. We also put some restrictions on windfall profits and exports of fuel. We also put some restrictions on steel and related metals. And earlier last year, we had put restrictions on iron ore. So all that would have an impact on export,” he added.

Subrahmanyam said the government is confident that exports would touch USD 450 billion this year compared to USD 400 billion last year.

If the current trends continued through the remaining part of the fiscal, India's trade deficit may touch USD 250 billion by March 2023, analysts said. This would compare to a trade deficit of USD 192.4 billion in the previous 2021-22 fiscal year. A widening trade gap has a direct impact on the current account deficit (CAD), which in turn influences the Indian rupee's resilience, investor sentiments and macroeconomic stability.

India's CAD, the broadest measure of India's sell-and-buy balance with the rest of the world, is likely to touch USD 105 billion or 3 percent of the GDP this fiscal.

In recent months, the government has brought several measures to rein in imports. It has raised the import duty on gold to 12.5 per cent from 7.5 percent, imposed restrictions on the import of several items, including electronic goods and set a target to increase the share of ethanol-blended fuel in domestic consumption from 10 percent now to 20 percent by 2025.

While these measures have helped in some moderation in the growth of the import bill, as reflected in the August numbers, the pressure points are on account of such imports, the demand for which is inelastic. These include crude oil and petroleum products, coal, chemicals and critical electronic components, such as semiconductor chips that account for more than 60 percent of the import bill. Also, India is highly dependent on the import of vegetable oil.

Besides oil, electronic goods imports have risen by almost 30 percent to USD 32.6 billion in April-August, while coal imports nearly tripled to USD 26.8 billion and vegetable oil rose by a third to USD 91 billion.

Gold imports are, however, down 13 percent at USD 16 billion. It is hoped that global commodity prices would continue easing in the months to come.

Also, many companies are front loading imports due to high freight costs and logistics disruptions globally.

On the other hand, a slowing global economy has also affected the demand for Indian exports. After growing at an average 18 percent in the first four months of the current fiscal, exports registered a marginal contraction in August, as the latest data showed.

With text inputs from PTI

For more details, watch the accompanying video

Also, catch all the live updates on markets with CNBC-TV18.com's blog

(Edited by : Abhishek Jha)

First Published:Sept 5, 2022 11:56 AM IST

Comments
Welcome to financetom comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Related Articles >
US Treasury reports $380 billion August budget deficit
US Treasury reports $380 billion August budget deficit
Sep 13, 2024
WASHINGTON, Sept 12 (Reuters) - The U.S. Treasury on Thursday reported a $380 billion federal budget deficit for August, a massive shift from the $89 billion surplus in August 2023 that resulted from the reversal of President Joe Biden's student loan forgiveness program. The deficit for the first 11 months of the 2024 fiscal year reached $1.897 trillion, a 24%...
US household rent burden unchanged last year, varied by race, Census says
US household rent burden unchanged last year, varied by race, Census says
Sep 13, 2024
(Reuters) - The median cost of housing for both U.S. renters and homeowners rose last year and while the share of income renters put toward housing was unchanged overall the degree to which households were cost-burdened varied by race, the Census Bureau said on Thursday. More than 21 million renter households spent more than 30% of their income on housing...
August CPI Is 2.5%
August CPI Is 2.5%
Sep 13, 2024
Today, we got the August Consumer Price Index (CPI) report which showed an overall increase of 2.5% for the last year and 0.3% for the month. That's below last month's 2.9% and consistent with expectations. The 0.3% monthly increase was above the 0.2% expected, and a bigger increase than last month's 0.2%. The Core CPI which excludes food and energy...
IMF says appropriate for U.S. Fed to start easing cycle as economy slows
IMF says appropriate for U.S. Fed to start easing cycle as economy slows
Sep 13, 2024
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The International Monetary Fund said on Thursday it was appropriate for the U.S. Federal Reserve to begin a long-awaited monetary easing cycle at its meeting next week as upside risks to inflation have subsided. IMF spokesperson Julie Kozack told a regular news briefing that the IMF expected the U.S. economy to slow over the rest of the...
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.financetom.com All Rights Reserved