India’s trade deficit set to widen in FY19, says Fitch
Source: MONEYLIFE
India Ratings and Research (Ind-Ra) believes India’s trade deficit will widen to a four-year high of 6.4% of GDP in FY19 (USD178.1 billion). In FY18, merchandise trade deficit stood at USD156.8 billion (6.0% of GDP) on account of a rise in oil and gold imports. Widening trade deficit, escalation in commodity prices, particularly oil, coupled with the expectation of the US Federal Reserve raising its rate further, is exerting pressure on the rupee. Even other emerging market currencies are facing headwinds. Rupee has depreciated below INR67/USD mark in May 2018 from the high of INR63.35/USD in January 2018.
Lately, external trade has emerged as a critical component in India’s growth engine. At its peak in FY13, trade accounted 55.8% of India’s GDP. However, post FY13, scenario changed due to sluggish global growth and rising protectionism, says Ind-Ra. As a result, contribution of trade to India’s GDP declined with private consumption and government spending supporting the growth momentum. Based on FY18 estimates, trade contribution to economy decreased to 40.6%.
On the import side, a 25.7% surge in petroleum/petroleum product imports coupled with a 32.1% rise in gold, silver and precious stones imports, led to the overall import registering a growth of 19.7% to USD459.7 billion in FY18. The proportion of these two commodities in total import during FY14-FY18 was 41.4%, points out Ind-Ra.
Organic/inorganic chemicals and engineering goods exports registered a 10.0% year-on-year growth to USD302.8 billion in FY18 led by the surge in petroleum products. Despite this double-digit growth, exports in FY18 were lower than FY15. India’s trade relations have increased significantly with Asian peers over the years driven by the Look East policy. Trade with China witnessed a CAGR of 7.4% over FY10-FY18, largely driven by imports. As a result, trade deficit with China widened to USD57.9 billion in 11MFY18 (FY10: USD19.2 billion). On the other hand, demand from Asian countries such as Bangladesh, Vietnam and Nepal contributed to the increase in exports, observes the Ind-Ra report.
Ind-Ra report also highlights macro-economic trends in the Indian economy using high frequency data on growth, inflation, trade balance, interbank liquidity, credit offtake, interest and exchange rates.
Source: MONEYLIFE
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