February trade deficit at 3.5-year low, exports continue fall

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New Delhi: India’s merchandise exports contracted at the sharpest pace in 20 months and shrank for the fourth straight month by 10.9% to $36.91 billion in February, pulled down by the high base effect, official data showed. Imports dipped 16.3%, the first drop in 11 months, to $50.96 billion and the trade deficit contracted to a 42-month low of $14 billion from $19.51 billion a year ago, data released by the commerce and industry ministry showed Monday.

Subdued Global Demand

The ministry has also estimated a $4.43 billion trade surplus in goods and services in February, the first surplus after the Covid-19 pandemic.

In February, India’s gold imports slipped to $2.3 billion from the past month’s $2.68 billion.Meanwhile, crude oil imports dropped to $11.8 billion from $13.4 billion in January, data showed. Sequentially, goods exports were up 1.31% from January 2025.

“This was a difficult year for us for trade. We are positively moving in the direction of above $800 billion exports,” said commerce secretary Sunil Barthwal, adding that services exports are growing above 14%.


Electronics, rice, marine, readymade garments and coffee exports grew in February while gems and jewellery were impacted by sanctions (imposed on Russian diamonds by G7 countries), he saidSeventeen out of the 30 key export areas witnessed a decline in outbound shipments.“The dip is primarily due to subdued global demand and ongoing challenges faced by key export sectors including the impact of the global tariff war,” said Ashwani Kumar, president of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations (FIEO).

He said compression of the deficit is a promising sign of India’s trade sector beginning to rebalance.

On the fall in imports, officials said that these are quick estimates and the government is looking into the details. However, they ruled out a fall in consumption demand. Non-petroleum, non-gems and jewellery imports, a measure of the strength of domestic demand, was $35.02 billion in February as against $33.96 billion a year ago. The US, the United Arab Emirates, the Netherlands and the UK were the top export destinations in the April-February period of FY25 while China, Russia, the UAE and the US were the top import sources.

In the 11 months of the fiscal year, India’s goods exports stood at $395.63 billion against $395.38 billion a year ago.

Trade Talks
The ministry said that substantial progress had been made on the outstanding issues with the UK on goods and services. “India, as an open economy, continues to engage both bilaterally and multilaterally with various geographies to safeguard its trade interests. Many countries are finding interest in India,” said an official.



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