Mid-year assessment of the first six months of this financial year shows that exports are growing in a healthy manner to build on the export growth seen in 2016-17 and 2017-18. In the first six months (April-September 2018), merchandise exports exhibited a positive growth of 19.93 per cent in Rupee terms and 12.54 per cent in US$ terms over same period last year.
Exports of Non-petroleum and Non Gems and Jewellery during April-September 2018 exhibited a positive growth of 17.51 per cent in Rupee terms and 10.32 per cent in US$ terms over same period last year. Thus the growth is robust and not confined to petroleum products alone.
Merchandise Exports in September 2018 exhibited a positive growth of 9.65 per cent in Rupee terms. In dollar terms there was a marginal negative growth in merchandise exports of 2.15 per cent in September 2018. This decline is entirely due to the base effect resulting from September 2017 being an abnormally high growth month of about 26% in dollar terms due to the imminent cut off then for drawbacks at pre-GST rates. This is a temporary out of trend phenomenon. Exporters continue to be resurgent with their realised incomes having gone up by almost 10 per cent. October 2018 figures promise to be as per the ongoing six-month trend again.
Imports during April-September 2018 exhibited a positive growth of 16.16 per cent in US$ terms. In September 2018, imports exhibited a positive growth of 10.45 per cent in US$ terms (which is the lowest in last 5 months) and 23.78 in Rupee terms. Merchandise Trade deficit during April-September 2018 is USD 94.32 Billion and USD 13.98 Billion in September 2018 which is the lowest in last 5 months, despite high oil prices.
Powered by Capital Market - Live News
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content