Exports of goods from India continued to grow in January 2018 posting
an increase of 9.07 per cent (year-on-year) to $24.38 billion propelled
by rise in engineering goods, petroleum products, chemicals and
pharmaceuticals.
Trade deficit, however, widened to $16.29 billion
in January 2018 as imports during the month increased a sharp 26.10 per
cent to $40.68 billion compared to the same month last year, according
to trade data released by the Commerce Ministry on Thursday.
Another concern for exporters and the economy at large is the
decline in exports from some of the largest employment generating
sectors including garments, handlooms, carpets, man-made textiles and
handicrafts. "Labour-intensive sectors are exhibiting negative growth
primarily due to liquidity crunch emanating from blocking of funds in
GST," pointed out Ganesh Kumar Gupta from FIEO.
Gupta said that
while exports increased for three consecutive months, the slowdown in
the pace of growth was worrying for exporters. Exports posted a 31 per
cent growth in November 2017 followed by an increase of 12.36 per cent
in December 2017.
Total exports for the period April-January
2017-18 posted a growth of 11.47 per cent to $ 247.89 billion, but the
target of 15 per cent growth set by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley
appeared to be slipping. Exports would need to cross $315 billion to
grow 15 per cent over last fiscal’s export of $275.85 billion.
Total
imports for the period April-January 2017-18 was $ 379.05 billion
registering a growth of 22.21 per cent over the same period last year.
Trade deficit in the ten-month period increased to $131.15 billion
compared to $88.33 billion in the same period last year.