India’s Trade Deficit | Current Affairs | Vision IAS
MENU
Home

Periodically curated articles and updates on national and international developments relevant for UPSC Civil Services Examination.

Quick Links

High-quality MCQs and Mains Answer Writing to sharpen skills and reinforce learning every day.

Watch explainer and thematic concept-building videos under initiatives like Deep Dive, Master Classes, etc., on important UPSC topics.

ESC

India’s Trade Deficit

27 Jul 2024
2 min

Why in the news? 

According to official data from Union Ministry of Commerce and Industry, in the FY 2023-24, India recorded trade deficit with 9 out of its top 10 trading partners.

Current Status of India's External trade (FY 2023-24)

  • Trade deficit (also known as negative trade balance) occurs when country's value of imports are more than that of exports.
  • China, USA, UAE, Russia, and Saudi Arabia are India's largest trading partners. (in descending order)
  • India's trade deficit with China, Russia, South Korea, and Hong Kong increased as compared to 2022-23, while it narrowed with UAE, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, and Iraq.
  • USA, Netherlands, UK, Belgium, and Italy are top 5 trading partners with which India has trade surplus.

Impact of higher trade deficit on Economy 

  • Negative
    • Depletion of Forex reserves due to the need to pay for excess imports, raising concerns of depreciation of domestic currency.
    • Widening current account deficit which may adversely affect credit rating of the country and raise borrowing costs.
    • Strategic implications due to sustained trade deficit, particularly for essential products or critical sectors.
  • Positive
    • Access to wider range of goods, increased domestic investment if deficit is driven by imports of capital goods, etc.

Reasons behind India's higher trade deficit 

  • Reliance on imported inputs, including crude oil and pharmaceutical ingredients.
  • Changing consumption patterns, including increased demand for consumer durables, luxury goods etc.
  • Structural factors such as sub-optimal growth of manufacturing sector, higher logistics cost, infrastructure bottlenecks etc.
  • Domestic policies such as inverted duty structure, frequent bans on exports of commodities etc.
  • Others – Sub-optimal utilization of FTAs, imposition of non-tariff barriers by developed countries etc.

Explore Related Content

Discover more articles, videos, and terms related to this topic

Title is required. Maximum 500 characters.

Search Notes

Filter Notes

Loading your notes...
Searching your notes...
Loading more notes...
You've reached the end of your notes

No notes yet

Create your first note to get started.

No notes found

Try adjusting your search criteria or clear the search.

Saving...
Saved

Please select a subject.

Referenced Articles

linked

No references added yet

Subscribe for Premium Features