India’s exports recorded their strongest growth in four years in May, driven by robust demand for engineering goods, electronics, pharmaceuticals, and petroleum products. The surge reflects improving global demand and stronger overseas shipments across key sectors.
According to preliminary trade data, merchandise exports rose sharply during the month, offering a positive signal for the country’s external trade performance after months of uneven global market conditions. Exporters attributed the growth to recovering demand in major markets, improved supply chains, and increased competitiveness in manufacturing sectors.
However, the country’s trade deficit widened during the same period as imports also climbed significantly, led by higher purchases of crude oil, gold, machinery, and electronic goods. Rising import costs outpaced export gains, increasing pressure on the overall trade balance.
Economists noted that while strong export growth is encouraging for India’s manufacturing and foreign exchange earnings, the expanding trade deficit could remain a concern if global commodity prices continue to rise. Analysts also pointed out that higher imports may partly reflect stronger domestic consumption and industrial activity.
The government has been focusing on boosting exports through production-linked incentive schemes, trade agreements, and infrastructure improvements aimed at strengthening India’s position in global supply chains.
Officials said sustaining export momentum in the coming months would depend on global economic recovery, currency movements, and geopolitical developments affecting international trade.
