In 2015 also, gold jewellery demand is expected to remain strong if the government does not impose further market distorting policies and price volatility does not unsettle the market, it said in its latest report.
India imported 769 tonnes of gold in 2014, down from 825 tonnes in the previous year. However, the annual smuggled gold is estimated to have been around 175 tonnes, it added.
Jewellery remains the biggest component of demand for gold. Indian demand for jewellery was up by eight per cent to 662 tonnes, the best year of jewellery demand since records began in 1995, the WGC report said.
Overall gold demand stood at 842.7 tonnes in 2014, of which gold jewellery demand alone was 662.1 tonnes.
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The fourth quarter growth was concentrated in October (Diwali) and November (wedding season), before the sudden and unexpected removal of import restrictions at the end of the month threw the market into disarray, it said.
According to WGC, smuggling volumes have since risen again as the 10 per cent import duty on gold continues to make this activity profitable enough for those operating well established routes.
"These channels are likely to remain open until government intentions with regards to gold imports are more clearly communicated to, and understood by, the market," it said, adding that annual gold smuggling volumes are estimated to have been around 175 tonnes.
"Although demand for bars of very small denominations was healthy during the auspicious festival period in Q4, larger scale investors -- traditionally focussed on large (kilo) bars -- were notable for their absence, preferring to invest in alternative asset classes," it said.
Gold used in other industrial and decorative applications fell by six per cent in 2014, slipping to a five-year low of 87.5 tonnes.
"The year-on-year decline was again concentrated in India, where demand for jari thread used in clothing was buffeted by changing consumer tastes," it added.