Slowdown in trade growth

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| Import growth in dollar terms was about 20 per cent in July, and by over 30 per cent during the April-July period. In rupee terms, however, the growth in July was a mere 4.7 per cent, although they grew by over 17 per cent over the first four months of the year. The sharp deceleration in July, from a relatively high rate of growth during the first quarter, is a warning signal. The industrial production numbers for July are due next week, and will show whether the slower rate of import growth resulted from a similar turn in industrial activity. After the first-quarter GDP numbers have shown 9.3 per cent growth, beating the forecasts of the pessimists, commentators will be reluctant to talk once again of a slowdown, but the numbers that have just come through suggest that this is a possibility. |
| As a consequence of these patterns, the trade deficit for July clocked in at slightly over $5 billion, or Rs 20,000 crore, taking the four-month number to about $26 billion, or Rs 105,000 crore. This is approximately 8 per cent of the four-month GDP, compared with 6.4 per cent during the corresponding period last year. Although the current account deficit is much smaller because of the surplus in the trade in invisibles, the widening of the trade deficit should make the economy's minders wary "" especially because the continuation of the past level of capital inflows cannot be assumed when there is turbulence in financial markets. The fact that the Reserve Bank's foreign exchange assets have dipped recently is relevant in this context. |
| Ironically, these trends may not be such a bad thing from the perspective of monetary policy, which has struggled to cope in recent months with large balance of payments surpluses. However, looking beyond the immediate horizon, policymakers need to come to grips with a macro-economic environment in which the objectives of export competitiveness, attracting foreign investment flows and managing external risks could well pull in different directions. There will be increasing pressure to make choices between these different and competing objectives. |
First Published: Sep 04 2007 | 12:00 AM IST