India’s economic environment has loosened. The HSBC Flash India Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) took April’s business activity to an eight-month high of 60.0, indicating robust beginnings for the new fiscal year. The drivers included a strong pickup in export orders and the resilience of domestic demand. Still, while cheers of optimism rise, silent tremors remain — global headwinds, policy uncertainties, and the persistent question: can India sustain this growth?
April data is not merely encouraging but historic. Manufacturing activity reached its highest level in a year, while new export orders saw their fastest rise since the survey began in 2014. This is a promising sign for an economy that has long sought to bolster exports beyond a consumption-driven model. Let us not mistake this powerful sprint for the one that wins the marathon, though.
Growth or Glitch?
It appears that a part of the export growth may have stemmed from a short-lived, unintended event: a 90-day suspension of the application of U.S. tariffs, announced by former U.S. President Donald Trump in early April. To avoid potential levies, businesses likely frontloaded orders, temporarily inflating India’s trade numbers. While this represented a welcome boost for Indian manufacturers, such gains remain fragile. What happens when the 90-day suspension ends? Will rising protectionism from the West dent India’s export potential?
The question is far from hypothetical. Global trade remains under pressure, and a resurgence of tariff-heavy policies in the U.S. could spell turbulence for economies relying on foreign demand. If India is to truly emerge as a manufacturing powerhouse, especially as China slows under sanctions, it must look beyond immediate spikes and invest in deep, systemic reforms.
Requirements of Employment Ecosystem
The good news is that the job market looks brighter in the coming months. Hiring surges by manufacturers and service providers have driven employment generation in the manufacturing sector to a record high since the survey’s inception in 2005. This is critical for a country with a young, ambitious population and an ongoing struggle against unemployment.
However, employment is not just about the number of jobs; it’s also about their quality. Without robust ecosystems for education, skill development, and supportive infrastructure, the gains could prove thin and uneven. India must ensure that new jobs are not only abundant but also resilient and rewarding.
Institutional Requirement for Exports
India’s exponential export growth hasn’t occurred in isolation. It is underpinned by improved production capacities, streamlined order flows, and the confidence of international buyers. Institutions are key to sustaining this momentum — including logistics, regulatory clarity, trade negotiation, and diplomatic stability. Undermining these pillars, even in the name of populism or short-term gains, whether by India or its trade partners, could damage the broader growth trajectory.
While demand surged in April, overall sentiment revealed cracks. Business confidence fell to an eight-month low, especially in services. Why? Because growth alone does not instill certainty — it often heightens caution. Businesses are hedging optimism amid global inflation, rising interest rates, and ongoing geopolitical tensions.
Balancing Hope and Policy
To be fair, Indian policymakers are making concerted efforts to position the country as a global manufacturing hub. Incentive schemes, infrastructure development, and diplomatic engagement are yielding early results. Yet boldness must be tempered with prudence.
Mixed trends in input cost inflation — rising in manufacturing and easing in services — highlight how delicately the equation is balanced. Companies are passing on higher costs to consumers, but how long can demand absorb the pressure? Without stabilising energy prices and controlling raw material and transport costs, inflation may shift from being a driver to a drag.
The Crossroads of India
If India falters, it won’t be because it aimed too high. It will be because it mistook temporary gains for structural achievements and fleeting momentum for sustainable growth. History favours nations that reform patiently, invest consistently, and diversify wisely.
The April rally is an opportunity. But opportunity alone does not ensure success. For India to become a true economic leader, it must look beyond the next quarter and commit to a decade of transformation — built on innovation, inclusion, and institutional strength.
This is a moment of choice: Will India ride the wave of fleeting optimism or lay down the foundations to weather the storms ahead?
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