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Composite PMI Shows India’s Private Sector Activity Still Falling But Pace Of Decline Slows

Swarajya StaffSep 03, 2020, 06:29 PM | Updated 06:29 PM IST
India manufacturing jobs (SAM PANTHAKY/AFP/GettyImages)

India manufacturing jobs (SAM PANTHAKY/AFP/GettyImages)


The IHS Markit India Composite Purchasing Managers Index, a snapshot of conditions in both the manufacturing and services sectors, came in at 46 in August, up from 37.2 in July.

The index, which is a gauge of month-on-month changes in private sector activity, indicates expansion when the reading is above 50 and contraction below it. August is the fifth consecutive month of contraction in private sector activity in the Indian economy, although the pace of decline has slowed.

PMI readings show the change from the previous month, which means that even if they show a reading above 50, all it indicates is that activity has rebounded from the depths plumbed in the earlier month and it’s still a long climb back to the level the economy was at before the contraction started in April 2020.

As we had pointed out, the PMI for manufacturing showed a mild bounce after four months. The services PMI in contrast, was at 41.8 in August, better than its 34.2 reading in July, but indicating a further decline from the previous month, albeit at a reduced pace.


With many services requiring person-to-person contact, it’s not surprising that the downturn in the sector has been more severe than in manufacturing. That is also why, while Indian manufacturers were optimistic about the next twelve months, two-thirds of respondents in the services sector said they expected output in the year ahead to remain at current levels in the year ahead.

The local lockdowns continued to have an impact, with backlogs of work in the services sector rising to the highest in 15 years. In the manufacturing sector too, the survey said ‘Supply chains were disrupted for a sixth consecutive month, with firms citing transportation restrictions, supplier delays and capacity pressures as the main drivers of lengthening delivery times.’

One concern is the continued fall in employment levels in August, which is likely to affect future demand. While input costs increased, the rise in output prices was marginal, which should provide some comfort to the central bank.

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