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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, July 16, 2001 |
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Addressing export challenges
By S. Swaminathan
Setting realistic targets for exports is a daunting exercise at
the best of times. The Union Commerce Ministry has now come out
with a target of export growth at 12 per cent in U.S. dollar
terms for 2001-02 yielding hopefully an aggregate export
performance of the value of $ 49.7 billions, as against $ 44.3
billions during 2000-01.
On the face of it, a climb-down from a near 21 per cent export
growth last year to a 12 per cent target, appears to be a
cautious if premature response to the global economic slowdown
which is itself perceived not so unanimously by economic
forecasters as a ``given'' reality in the flux of economic
dynamics, in the U.S., in Europe and in the Asia-Pacific ``rim''
countries.
A flash in the pan?
The Commerce Ministry's assessment of the country's export
prospects for the current year is obviously based on inputs
provided by various export promotion councils, commodity boards
and leading members of the exporting community.
If there is one area where the exporters of India have remained
short-charged over the years, it is the systematic commercial
information flow from Indian trade consulates abroad. The old
mindset of political diplomacy reigns in the foreign services of
the country even though the traditional ``export pessimism''
dominating Indian economic policy would appear to have yielded
place to a newer confidence about exports becoming a lead-sector
in India's development strategy.
In setting its sights on a modest 12 per cent export growth
during 2001-02, the Ministry of Commerce has, perhaps, persuaded
itself that the near-21 per cent export growth during 2000-01 was
an exceptional if not a fortuitous achievement despite setbacks
in the Indian economy.
There is no denying the fact that the export turnaround in 2000-
01 occurred after a long sluggish phase which began in 1996-97.
The nadir in the export effort was reached in 1998-99 when
aggregate exports at $ 33.2 billions represented a decline by 5.2
per cent.
What is even more pertinent, a 20 per cent annual average export
growth is neither too far-fetched nor unprecedented.
Over the three-year period 1993-96, the export growth was indeed
buoyant, raising merchandise exports from less than $ 17.8
billions in 1992-93 to $ 31.8 billions in 1995-96. What is
equally noteworthy, it was the agricultural sector which turned
out as a key performer in the export effort despite the continued
dominance of manufactured goods in the export profile.
Far from the export performance being dampened by an overall
deceleration in GDP growth, the experience in 2000-01 perhaps
raises the issue of how a well-crafted export strategy can
provide the ballast for an economy suffering from a chronic
deficiency in domestic demand, given substantial idle capacity in
industry.
Export commodity composition
Manufactured goods had a marginal decline in their share of total
exports - from about 81 per cent in 1999-2000 to about 78 per
cent in 2000-01, but their rate of growth of exports actually
increased from 15.3 per cent in 1999-2000 to 16.2 per cent in
2000-01.
Taking the benchmark for export growth at 20 per cent, sturdy
performances during the last year, came from quite a few segments
such as engineering goods, agro-chemicals, electronic goods and
leather and manufactures.
Textiles and readymade garments have recorded a 15-17 per cent
growth in exports which is but a pointer to what can be achieved
in a quota-free regime but not without strategic investments in
technology and brand promotion.
Exports of agricultural commodities and allied products including
processed fruits and vegetables were of the order of $ 6 billions
in 2000-01, representing less than 15 per cent of the total
exports. Agricultural experts have repeatedly urged not only crop
diversification and ``precision farming'' but the expeditious
adoption of scientific storage and post-harvest technologies.
That there is vast export potential in the special agri-export
zones proposed is not in doubt. But how many state governments
will move fast with viable strategies for attracting investments
in this sector remains an enigma never mind the occasional
affirmative postures of these governments.
Geography not adequately leveraged
Over a long era beginning with the Second Five Year Plan period,
the policy mindset in India has been shaped by the paradigm of
``import substitution at any cost'' - a far cry from the
contemporary economics of export competition.
A derivative of this mindset is that an export strategy nibbling
at the affluent markets of the U.S. and the European union would
more than work ``wonders''. The fact that the European union
accounts for about 23.5 per cent of the total exports and the
U.S. for around 21 per cent seems to have become such a
``fixation'' that any downturn in these economies comes to be
misinterpreted as a calamity for Indian exports even if these
constitute a minuscule proportion of the total imports of the
U.S. and the European union.
By contrast, the under-developed potential for Indian exports in
Asia (in particular in China and in the ASEAN region), in the
Middle East and Africa (particularly in South Africa), needs to
be factored in much more systematically and purposefully in the
country's export strategy.
The generic complaints of the Indian exporting community
regarding high transactions costs inhibiting the export effort
are no doubt legitimate.
The policymakers need continually to seek to redress the
grievances of exporters but Indian industry can hardly hope to
penetrate global markets except on the basis of aggressive
marketing strategies based on world-class design and quality
apart from reliable delivery.
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