India’s merchandise trade deficit narrowed to $21.94 billion in December, down from a record $31.86 billion in November, as gold imports halved to $4.7 billion, according to commerce department data. The data showed merchandise exports contracted by 1 percent year-on-year to $38.01 billion in December amid ongoing geopolitical tensions. Significantly, electronics exports rose 35.11 percent to a 24-month high of $3.58 billion in December 2024.
Meanwhile, imports grew 4.9 percent year-on-year to $59.95 billion but fell by 6 percent vis-à-vis November’s revised figure of $63.86 billion. The import data figure for the April-November 2024 period also saw a downward revision of $17.5 billion to $469.3 billion, from $486.8 billion. The corrections primarily affected gold import data, which was revised downward by $11.7 billion for the period, alongside reductions in silver and electronics imports. In November alone, gold imports were slashed by $5 billion to $9.8 billion following the discovery of a calculation error caused by double-counting shipments stored in warehouses.
Last week, the commerce department said that data revision was necessitated due to the “migration of data transmission mechanism” from National Securities Depository Limited (NSDL) — which captures special economic zone (SEZ) data—to the Indian Customs Electronic Gateway (ICEGATE). The government is still reviewing trade data, and the process is expected to be completed by next month, said another official. The revisions could have implications for key macroeconomic indicators, including the current account deficit (CAD) and gross domestic product (GDP).
Gold imports remained elevated in December, rising 55 percent year-on-year to $4.7 billion. Aditi Nayar, chief economist and head of research & output at ICRA, noted that a Customs duty cut earlier this financial year was the reason for more than half the rise in the trade deficit.
Other import categories also recorded increases, with electronics up 9.6 per cent, petroleum products rising 2.2 per cent, machinery up 11.75 per cent, organic and inorganic chemicals increasing 7.59 per cent, and vegetable oil imports surging 18.61 per cent. On the export front, petroleum shipments fell by 28.6 per cent year-on-year to $4.9 billion, while gems and jewellery exports plummeted by 26 per cent to $2.5 billion. However, other key sectors showed growth: Engineering goods rose 8.35 per cent, drugs and pharmaceuticals were up 0.63 per cent, electronics surged 35.11 per cent, and readymade garments increased 12.89 per cent.
Non-petroleum and non-gems and jewellery product exports (core exports) together grew 8 per cent to $30.9 billion. For the April-December period, cumulative merchandise exports rose 1.6 per cent to $321.71 billion, while imports climbed 5.1 per cent to $532.48 billion. In the services sector, exports grew by 3.2 per cent year-on-year to $32.66 billion in December, while imports rose by 11.9 per cent to $17.5 billion, leaving a services trade surplus of $15.16 billion. However, December’s services trade data remains provisional and will be revised following Reserve Bank of India updates.