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Gold Imports Dip 5.5% During April-February To $29.5 Billion 

Trade experts said softening prices of the yellow metal in the world markets could be the reason for the contraction in imports.



A worker monitors operations as water is added to concentrate at Freeport McMoRan Inc.’s Grasberg copper and gold mining complex in Papua province. (Photographer: Dadang Tri/Bloomberg)
A worker monitors operations as water is added to concentrate at Freeport McMoRan Inc.’s Grasberg copper and gold mining complex in Papua province. (Photographer: Dadang Tri/Bloomberg)

India’s gold imports dipped about 5.5 percent in value terms to $29.5 billion during April-February 2018-19, which is expected to keep a lid on the current account deficit.

Total imports of the precious metal in the corresponding period of 2017-18 stood at $31.2 billion, according to commerce ministry data.

Trade experts said softening prices of the yellow metal in the world markets could be the reason for the contraction in imports.

After recording negative growth for three consecutive months of October, November and December 2018, gold imports grew by 38.16 percent to $2.31 billion in January this year. It again contracted by 10.8 percent to $2.58 billion in February.

India is one of the largest gold importers in the world, and the imports mainly take care of demand from the jewellery industry.

Gems and jewellery exports too dipped by 6.3 percent to $28.5 billion during the 11 months of the current fiscal.

India's Current Account Deficit, or the difference between outflow and inflow of foreign exchange in the current account, widened to 2.9 percent of the GDP in the second quarter of the fiscal, against 1.1 percent in the year-ago period, mainly due to a large trade deficit.

The government has introduced several measures to restrict the import of gold, including restricting duty-free gold imports from South Korea as allowed under the India-Korea free trade agreement and imposition of self-use condition on Premier Trading House/Star Trading House authorised to import the precious metal directly from overseas bullion suppliers.

It has also imposed 10 percent import duty on gold.

The domestic jewellery industry always demands a cut in the duty and relaxation of norms for increasing availability of the yellow metal to boost jewellery exports.