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As per the Economic Survey, the outlook for the external sector is perhaps the most favorable since the 2008 global financial crisis and especially compared to 2012-13, when elevated oil and gold imports fuelled a surge in the current account deficit.
The Global Economy is likely to gain strength if lower global crude petroleum prices drive the demand recovery process in emerging markets. After the global crisis of 2008, the global economy came under a cloud of uncertainty and prolonged weakness in euro area particularly since 2011. This led the IMF to revise the global growth downwards. The global economic environment appears poised for a change for the better with recent sharp fall in the international prices of crude petroleum which is expected to boost global aggregate demand.
On the Issue of India’s Merchandise Trade, over the last ten years, India’s Merchandise Trade (on custom basis) increased manifold from US$ 195.1 billion in 2004-05 to US$ 764.6 billion in 2013-14 helping in improving India’s share in global exports and imports from 0.8% to 1.0% respectively in 2004 to 1.7% and 2.5% in 2013.
In 2013-14, India’s trade deficit(on custom basis) declined to US$ 135.8 billion from a high level of 190.3 billion in 2012-13 mainly on account of a decline in the growth of imports even though growth in exports was sluggish at 4.7%.
The decline in imports owed to lower growth in oil imports (0.4%) and negative growth in gold and silver imports.
Some of the Trade Policy Measures Taken by the Government as per the Economic Survey
Even though 2013-14 witnessed a sharp depreciation of the rupee in the initial part of the year with significant reserve drawdown, steps taken by the government and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) resulted in a rise in the stock of foreign exchange reserves which was placed at US$ 304.2 billion at end-March 2014 as against US$292.0 billion at end-March,2014.
In the first half of 2014-15, India’s foreign exchange reserves increased by US$ 18.1 billion on BoP basis(that is excluding valuation effect).
Economic Survey says among the major economies with current account deficit, India is the second largest foreign exchange reserve holder after Brazil.

Post 1991 BoP crisis India’s prudent external debt policy and management with a focus on sustainability, solvency and liquidity have helped contain the increase in size of external debt to moderate level. India’s total external debt stock at end March 2014 stood at US$ 442.3 billion (8.0 per cent) over the end-March 2013 level.
The rise in the external debt during the period was due to long term debt particularly NRI deposits and commercial borrowings.
At the end of September, 2014, a long term debt accounted for 81.1% of the total external debt vis-a-vis 79.8 per cent at the end of March, 2014 and short term debt accounted for 18.9% of the total external debt vis-à-vis 20.2% at the end of March, 2014.
The net external commercial borrowing has also increased from US$ 2.4 billion in 2013-14 to US $3.4 billion in 2014-15.
India's external sector strengthens as reserves recover and trade measures aim to boost manufacturing and export diversification. External sector conditions are improving due to lower global crude prices and financial inflows that have rebuilt foreign exchange reserves, though reconciling inflows with export performance and the current account remains a policy challenge. Trade expanded over the decade with a reduced trade deficit in 2013-14 driven by lower imports of oil, gold and silver despite modest export growth. The Survey outlines trade policy measures-using scrips and schemes for duty/service tax offsets, market and product expansions, and a trade portal-to promote manufacturing, import substitution and export diversification, and notes a moderate rise in long term external debt.Press 'Enter' after typing page number.