Surprisingly, the current account deficit narrowed from $22.16 billion in December 2021 quarter to $13.40 billion in March 2022 quarter. This was largely on account of moderation of the trade deficit and lower net outgo of primary income (which is largely the interest costs). We will come back to this point later.
In the last 12 quarters, India reported a current account deficit in 8 quarters and a current account surplus in 4 quarters. Three out of these four quarters of current account surplus were at the peak of the COVID crisis when the imports had sharply dipped amidst zero economic activity in India. The other time India had reported a current account surplus was in June 2021 when COVID had reared its head violently. Ironically, in India, current account surplus has been synonymous with bad times while a current account deficit has been synonymous with relatively better times.
Chart Source: RBI
Why the current account deficit narrowed in March 2022 quarter?
For the March 2022 quarter, the current account deficit eased sequentially from $22.16 billion to $13.40billion. This marks the third successive month of current account deficit. There were 3 key reasons for the current account deficit narrowing in the Q4FY22.
The concern is that the trade deficit has been rapidly widening. The trade deficit could touch $250 billion in FY23 and that could add a lot of pressure on CAD. Apart from crude oil, imports of coke, coal, gold and fertilizers also saw a spike in fiscal year FY22.
How the current account looks like in March 2022 quarter
In FY21, India had reported a small current account surplus due to the $35 billion surplus generated in Jun-20 and Sep-20 quarters.
However, as imports picked up steam since then, trade deficit and the current account deficit have gradually widened. Here is a break-up of the current account deficit in the March 2022 quarter.
Pressure on Current Account (CA) | Amount | Boosting the Current Account (CA) | Amount |
Q4 Trade Deficit | ($54.50 bn) | Q4 Services Surplus | +$28.30 bn |
Primary A/C – Interest | ($8.40 bn) | Secondary Income | +$21.20 bn |
Negative Thrust on CA | (-62.90 bn) | Positive Thrust on CA | +$49.50 bn |
Current Account Deficit | (-$13.40 bn) |
Data Source: RBI
The current account deficit in March 2022 has been $7.76 billion lower than in December 2021. This is largely on account of lower merchandise trade deficit, lower primary account outflows and a marginally higher services trade surplus. However, if you look at the current run rate of imports, total merchandise trade deficit could cross $250 billion in FY23. That is going to put a lot of pressure on the current account deficit and there is no way the services trade can meaningfully mitigate that effect.
Current Account Deficit for fiscal year FY22
When the RBI announced the current account numbers for the fourth quarter, it also announced the numbers for the full year FY22. Here are
key current account takeaways for FY22.
In short, the pressure on the current account is likely to remain, and perhaps, deepen in the fiscal year FY23.
Will merchandise trade be the villain in June 2022 quarter?
The cumulative overall trade deficit combining merchandise and services trade stood at $(8.08) billion in April 2022 but burgeoned to $(27.30) billion in May 2022. That represents a sharp increase of $19.22 billion to overall deficit (trade plus services) in just the last one month. At the existing run rate, the overall deficit could end up closer to $150 billion and could pose a real challenge to the current account deficit (CAD) levels in FY23.
Particulars | Exports FY23 ($ bn) | Imports FY23 ($ bn) | Surplus / Deficit ($ bn) |
Merchandise trade | $78.72 bn | $123.41 bn | $(-44.69) bn |
Services Trade # | $45.87 bn | $28.48 bn | $+17.39 bn |
Overall Trade | $124.59 bn | $151.89 bn | $(-27.30) bn |
Data Source: DGFT (# – DGFT estimates due to 1-month lag in RBI reporting)
How does this figure look in comparison? India closed FY21 with combined deficit of $-12.75 billion or $1.06 billion a month. The combined deficit in FY22 was $-87.79 billion, or $7.32 billion a month. If you consider the first 2 months of FY23, India could close FY23 with an overall deficit in the vicinity of $150 billion, substantially higher than FY22. That is likely to put a lot of pressure on the current account, with its concomitant impact on the rupee value and also on the sovereign ratings.
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