Mr Ashwani Kumar added that the ongoing
international trade disruptions along with drop in crude and metal prices have
also played key role in bringing down the value of exports. Some of the exporters
have diverted to the domestic market as profitability in exports have taken a
hit with sharp rise in international freight (both ship and air), reiterated
FIEO President. Mr Kumar also said that had it not been these trade disruptions
led by logistical challenges such as lack of shipping space, irregular shipping
schedule, ships skipping Indian ports and declining commodity prices, the
merchandise exports would have recorded positive growth in exports.
President Chief also added that the continuous hard work put in by the
exporting community is paying dividends though there is also slowdown in demand
from several key markets,
reflected in sluggish growth projections. Mr Ashwani Kumar, however, reiterated
that he is optimistic of better growth numbers with improved demand coming in
from the European Union, UK, West Asia and the US in months to come, which will
not only further give a boost to the overall order bookings but also to the
labour-intensive sectors of exports.
FIEO Chief added that imports increased by about
3.3 per cent to USD 64.36 billion in August 2024. In absolute terms, the trade
gap widened to USD 29.65 billion in August, compared to USD 23.5 billion in
July, which is a point of concern, added President, FIEO.
However, good growth in exports of coffee,
tobacco, spices, meat, apparel, chemicals, engineering, carpets, handicraft,
plastic etc is an encouraging sign for job growth in the country.
FIEO President, Mr Ashwani Kumar further reiterated that the urgent and
immediate need of the hour is to take steps on the liquidity front with deeper
interest subvention support and extension of interest equalisation scheme for
at least 5 years, creating a predictable
business environment for the exporters. Government should extend the RoDTEP
Scheme, expiring on 30th September 2024 so as to enable
exporters to plan ahead. Besides, data transmission challenges with regard to
DGFT, ICEGATE and EDPMS may also be addressed on top priority and preferably a
single agency may be given the task for up-dation and maintenance of all the 3
systems for uniformity and holistic approach.
The government should also look at facilitating
trade through easy & low cost of credit, marketing support and conclusion
of some of the key FTAs with UK, Peru and Oman soon, which FIEO have been
urging to the government for quite some time now, added Mr Kumar.