The CAD, which is the difference between inflow and outflow of foreign exchange, touched an all-time high of $88.2 billion or 4.8% of GDP in 2012-13.
"Exports is doing fairly well ... Month on month there might be slight blip here and there, but draw a line it will be straight and secular. It is not curving down. We are quite confident that CAD should be around $50 billion for the financial year," Mayaram told PTI.
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He said the trade deficit, which is the difference between export and import, has narrowed to $9.2 billion in November, from $10.6 billion in October.
The CAD in the first half (April-September) of the current fiscal came down to $26.9 billion (3.1% of GDP), from $37.9 billion (4.5% of GDP) in H1 of 2012-13.
Declining gold imports has also contributed to improvement in the CAD, which dropped to 1.2% in Q2, as against 4.9% in Q1.
Gold imports, according to Mayaram, fell to 19.3 tonnes in November, from 162 tonnes in May.
In order to restrict inward shipment of gold, the government and the RBI had announced various measures, including hiking import duty to 10%. With the decline of imports, there is a clamour that the government should ease the curbs as they are encouraging smuggling.