The latest quarterly survey by Ficci on manufacturing outlook for the second quarter also finds that the interest rate paid by the manufacturers still remains high and sticky.
Uncertain economic environment, unfavourable market conditions, competition from imports, delayed clearances, inadequate infrastructure (especially availability of power) and cost escalation are some of the major constraints affecting the expansion plans of the industry, the poll noted.
The survey had earlier indicated a slowdown for the first quarter of 2016-17, which seems to be waning.
Manufacturing sector in India continued with its uptrend and hit a four-month high in July, backed by stronger upturn in new business orders.
More From This Section
The Nikkei Markit India Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) - a composite indicator of manufacturing performance - rose to 51.8 in July from 51.7 in June.
A reading above 50 denotes expansion while one below means contraction.
Export outlook for manufacturing in September quarter improved slightly as against the expectations for the first quarter. The proportion of respondents expecting higher exports in the second quarter rose by 5 percentage points to 41 per cent as against 36 per cent in 2016-17.
However, hiring outlook remains subdued in manufacturing in coming months as three quarters of the participants in second quarter of 2016-17 are unlikely to hire additional workforce in next three months. The proportion remains almost similar to that recorded for June quarter (76 per cent).
The survey mapped expectations of manufacturers for thirteen major sectors namely auto, capital goods, cement and ceramics, chemicals, electronics & electricals, food products, leather and footwear, machine tools, metal and metal products, metal forging, paper products, textiles and technical textiles and textiles machinery.
The milder improvement for the quarter gets reflected in
terms of investment as for Q2, 73 per cent respondents reported that they do not have any plans for capacity addition for the next six months, as against 75 per cent respondents in previous quarter.
Five sectors, namely capital goods, cement and ceramics, chemicals, metal forging and paper products are likely to witness strong growth of over 10 per cent in Q2 2016-17.
About 49 per cent respondents reported higher order books for the July-September quarter 2016-17 which is more than that of the previous quarter (38 per cent).
Average capacity utilization for the total manufacturing sector is around 76 per cent for Q1 2016-17, marginally above the 74 per cent for Q4 2015-16, the poll revealed.
The cost of production as a percentage of sales for product for manufacturers in the survey has risen as 49 per cent respondents reported cost escalation while only 16 per cent reported lower production costs.