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Consumer Confidence Weakens Further In A Slowing Economy

Consumer sentiment fell to its lowest since at least March 2014.

A day labourer looks at a mobile phone while lying on a wooden cart outside a store at Fancy Bazaar in Guwahati, Assam, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)
A day labourer looks at a mobile phone while lying on a wooden cart outside a store at Fancy Bazaar in Guwahati, Assam, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

It’s not just onion prices troubling Indians. A survey by the central bank showed that consumer sentiment has fallen to its lowest since at least March 2014 as the economy slows.

Consumer confidence weakened further, falling consistently from 104.6 in March 2019 to 85.7 in November 2019, according to the Current Situation Index of the RBI. That was mirrored by the Future Expectations Index which declined to 114.5 in November from 118 in the previous round of the survey in September.

And the consumer sentiment deteriorated across categories—current perception on the economic situation, employment, price levels, and income. One-year ahead expectations were buoyant in comparison, though consumers remained divided over whether they expected signs of improvement compared to the last round.

Consumer Confidence Weakens Further In A Slowing Economy

The sentiment reflects the slowdown in the economy as the GDP growth slipped to 4.5 percent in July-September, the weakest since 2013. Indicators from car sales to consumer goods volumes continue to show a decline in consumption. That’s added to the central bank’s conundrum as it paused its rate cut cycle as inflation rose on higher food prices.

Spending on non-essential items of consumption shrunk compared to a year ago, the Monetary Policy Committee said, adding that consumers expect their overall spending to remain unchanged largely due to an increase in prices.

Household inflation expectations, measured by the Reserve Bank’s November round of the survey, showed a sharp increase of 120 basis points over three months earlier and by 180 basis points in the one-year ahead horizon, tracking the spike in food prices in recent months.

On the supply side, capacity utilisation fell to 68.9 percent in quarter ended September from 73.6 percent three months earlier, the MPC said citing the early results of the Reserve Bank’s order books, inventories and capacity utilisation survey. Seasonally adjusted capacity utilisation fell to 69.8 percent from 74.6 per cent during the same period.

Manufacturing firms polled in the industrial outlook survey of the Reserve Bank expect weak demand conditions and reduced input price pressures in third and fourth quarters of the year ending March 2020. The survey suggests muted output prices, reflecting further weakening of pricing power.