The commerce minister ought to seek validation for his incentives with the finance ministry.
Reserve Bank of India Governor Y Venugopal Reddy announced the 2007-08 Annual Monetary Policy on April 24, six clear days after Commerce Minister Kamal Nath unveiled the third edition of the five-year foreign trade policy. While outlining the new initiatives in the trade policy, Nath also talked about buoyant exports, which, he revealed, had grown by 22 per cent for the whole of 2006-07 to $124.65 billion.
There was, therefore, some surprise when the RBI Governor's monetary policy talked about merchandise exports for only the April-February 2006-07 period. Why didn't the apex bank take into account the full year's exports figure which the commerce minister had so proudly announced almost a week before?
There are several explanations doing the rounds in government circles and the most charitable one says that the central bank might have preferred to rely on the formal release of the export-import data, instead of just banking on what the commerce minister claimed in his trade policy statement.
Nevertheless, the mystery remains unresolved. Going by the minister's claim of a $125 billion exports in 2006-07, the country's merchandise exports in March 2007 should have been more than $15.5 billion representing a 40 per cent growth over the March 2006 figure. This would have defied all forecasts and the single digit exports growth trend witnessed in the three preceding months from December 2006.
Going forward, the Institute of Economic Growth has also forecast that the average monthly exports growth rate in the next three months (March to May) would not cross 11 per cent, thanks to a relative slow down in the global economy.
So, did the commerce minister go overboard with his optimism? He has targeted exports of $160 billion in 2007-08, which would mean a growth rate of 28 per cent. And for 2008-09, the exports target is $200 billion, which indeed is highly ambitious, given the manner in which global demand for goods has seen a downturn. The strengthening rupee may make the exporters' task even more difficult, although there are views that a stronger rupee against the dollar may not be much of a dampener.
Since India's import-intensity