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India’s Trade Collapses in April in Sign of Worsening Economy

India’s trade plunged in April as a nationwide lockdown disrupted supply chains and brought domestic demand to a halt.

India’s Trade Collapses in April in Sign of Worsening Economy
Shipping containers sit stacked on a container ship at the Jawaharlal Nehru Port in Navi Mumbai. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- India’s trade plunged in April as a nationwide lockdown disrupted supply chains and brought domestic demand to a halt in Asia’s third-largest economy.

Exports contracted 60% from a year ago, while imports declined 58.7%, according to the data released by the Commerce Ministry on Friday. That resulted in a trade deficit of $6.76 billion in April, narrower than the $9.8 billion recorded in March, and compared with a median estimate of $6.1 billion in a Bloomberg survey of 14 economists.

Key Insights

  • The slump in exports followed a 35% plunge in March as more countries began imposing lockdowns to contain the coronavirus pandemic, putting a brake on global demand. Imports were already on a steady decline since last year as India’s economy slowed
  • India has begun gradually reopening its economy but the damage to growth and jobs is already severe. Economists in a Bloomberg survey predict the first contraction in GDP in more than four decades
  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi this week announced a $265 billion support package to cushion the economy. His speech emphasized the need for self-reliance, signaling a more protectionist stance as he asked people to embrace locally-made goods

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  • Oil imports fell 59% in April from a year earlier to $4.66 billion
  • To read the full statement on trade numbers, click here

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