Vishleshan

Vishleshan for Regulatory Exams 17th May 2026 | India’s Trade Deficit at $28.38B Amid Export Recovery

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For policymakers tracking India’s external account, the April merchandise deficit of $28.38 billion is more than a headline about widening gaps. Yes, exports rose to $43.56 billion and services surged 13.37% YoY, but the deeper story lies in structural asymmetry — oil‑driven import costs, MSME freight stress, and a services cushion masking merchandise fragility. What looks like a deterioration is partly a normalization after March’s Hormuz‑induced freeze, yet the uneven burden on clusters from Kerala spices to Morbi ceramics signals a segmented shock. In this Vishleshan, we decode why April’s deficit conceals resilience in services, how MSMEs face disproportionate pain, and why India’s $2‑trillion export target demands more than announcements — it requires execution speed in financing, diversification, and policy delivery through FY27.

India’s April trade deficit widens to $28.38 billion as exports rise

Context: India’s merchandise trade deficit widened to $28.38 billion in April 2026, as a strong export recovery was outpaced by rising imports driven by elevated crude prices and Hormuz-related supply chain disruptions. The overall trade deficit — including services — actually narrowed, as India’s services exports hit record levels and quietly absorbed the pressure from the goods account. The article presents analysis on the April data and the government’s $2 trillion export target.

Link to the Article: Mint

Background: Understanding India’s Trade Account

What Is the Trade Deficit?

The trade deficit is the gap between what a country imports and what it exports in a given period. When imports exceed exports, the difference is a deficit; when exports exceed imports, it is a surplus. India has structurally run a merchandise trade deficit — importing more goods than it exports — for decades, owing primarily to its dependence on crude oil, gold, and electronics imports.

The trade account is one part of India’s Current Account, which also includes:

ComponentIndia’s Position
Merchandise tradeStructural deficit (oil, gold, electronics)
Services tradeStructural surplus (IT, software, BPO)
Primary incomeSmall deficit (profit repatriation by MNCs)
Secondary income (transfers)Large surplus (remittances from diaspora)

India’s Current Account Deficit (CAD) is the net of all four components. Because services exports and remittances provide large surpluses, India’s CAD is typically far smaller than the merchandise deficit alone.

Two Numbers That Matter: Merchandise vs. Overall

Decoding the Article: Analysis

  1. The Headline Number Conceals a More Nuanced Story
  2. The article leads with the widening merchandise deficit of $28.38 billion, which is factually accurate but creates an incomplete picture if read in isolation.
  3. The more significant data point is that the overall trade deficit narrowed to $7.81 billion — the lowest in recent months — because services exports grew 13.37% YoY to $37.24 billion while services imports actually contracted 1.48%.
  4. This means that even as India’s goods trade worsened, its services engine — primarily IT, software, and business process services — is running at full strength and partially absorbing the merchandise gap.
  5. The March–April swing also needs context. March’s narrow merchandise deficit of $20.67 billion was an outlier caused by a sharp fall in both exports and imports as the initial Hormuz shock froze cargo flows. April’s return to $28.38 billion is partly a normalisation — exports recovered from $38.92 billion to $43.56 billion as exporters found alternative routes — not a pure deterioration. The article notes this but does not frame it explicitly.
  6. Commerce Secretary Sunil Barthwal confirmed that imports from the Middle East declined 31.64% in April, which means the wider deficit was not caused by more Gulf imports — it was caused by higher crude prices making the same or smaller volumes of oil costlier, and by a broad-based recovery in imports from other geographies as supply chains adjusted.
  • The Hormuz Effect Is Asymmetric Across Export Sectors, and MSMEs Bear a Disproportionate Share
  • The article notes that MSMEs face rising freight and delays and account for 48% of exports. But the Hormuz disruption does not affect all MSME exporters equally — the exposure is concentrated in specific geographies and commodities.
  • About 15.1% of India’s exports (April–December 2025) were linked to West Asia, and of India’s Hormuz-routed exports, only around $5.3 billion (less than 10%) may face genuine difficulty finding alternative markets — EU, US, and ASEAN can absorb most redirected shipments.

However, the burden of route diversion falls unevenly:

  • Kerala spice exporters — cardamom, pepper, dry ginger — face $90–180 million in quarterly losses from route disruption alone, with freight, logistics, and insurance adding $30–60 million more.
  • Morbi ceramics cluster (Gujarat) — heavily reliant on Gulf export markets with limited substitution options, faces order cancellations and cash flow stress.
  • Rice exporters — struggle to secure cargo berths on diverted routes; Middle East and African markets for basmati and non-basmati rice are geographically linked to Gulf ports.
  • Large exporters in engineering goods, pharma, and IT — can absorb freight cost increases through margins or pass them on to buyers; the structural export recovery in April’s $43.56 billion figure is largely driven by these larger players.

The article mentions MSMEs in one line. The more precise picture is that Hormuz is a segmented shock — manageable at the macro export level but acutely painful at the cluster and community level.

  • The $2 Trillion Target Deserves a Gap Analysis, Not Just an Announcement

India’s total exports (goods + services) in FY26 were a record $863.11 billion. The $2 trillion target by FY31 requires exports to more than double in five years — an implied compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of approximately 18.4%.

India’s best-ever merchandise export CAGR over any five-year period was approximately 12–14%, achieved during the 2003–2008 commodity supercycle. Services exports have grown at a steadier 12–15% CAGR over the past decade. Reaching $2 trillion by FY31 therefore requires:

  • Merchandise exports to grow from ~$442 billion to $1 trillion — a 126% increase in 5 years, implying ~17.7% CAGR annually
  • Services exports to grow from ~$418 billion to $1 trillion — a 139% increase, implying ~19.1% CAGR annually

Neither trajectory has precedent in India’s export history. The Export Promotion Mission’s two sub-schemes — Niryat Protsahan (trade finance access) and Niryat Disha (market access) — are directionally correct instruments, but the scale of financing, the depth of market diversification required, and the geopolitical environment created by the West Asia war all make the FY31 timeline highly ambitious.

What to Watch

Three indicators will determine whether India’s trade trajectory improves through FY27:

  • Monthly merchandise trade data (June–August 2026) — the directional signal: April’s $28.38 billion deficit is the first post-March data point. If the merchandise deficit stays above $25 billion through June–August, it will signal that the Hormuz premium on crude and the route diversion costs are not abating and that the BoP is under sustained pressure. A return to the $20–23 billion range — India’s pre-FY26 norm — would indicate supply chain adjustment is progressing.
  • MSME export credit data and Niryat Protsahan uptake (quarterly, SIDBI/ECGC) — the execution signal: the Export Promotion Mission’s financing sub-schemes are the government’s primary lever for protecting MSME exporters during the disruption period. SIDBI’s quarterly MSME credit data and ECGC’s export credit insurance uptake will show whether the policy instruments are reaching stressed clusters in Kerala, Morbi, and the rice export belt. Low uptake would indicate a last-mile delivery failure in the scheme’s most important segment.
  • Services export data and IT sector order book (quarterly, NASSCOM/RBI BoP releases) — the cushion signal: India’s $7.81 billion overall deficit is manageable partly because services exports are running at record levels. Any slowdown in IT services demand from the US or EU — whether from a global slowdown or from AI-driven productivity gains reducing Indian IT outsourcing demand — would remove the primary buffer that is currently keeping the overall trade account from widening materially. NASSCOM’s quarterly business outlook survey is the leading indicator for this risk.

India’s April trade data tells two stories simultaneously. The merchandise account is under pressure — from costlier oil, disrupted Gulf routes, and import normalisation — and the $333.2 billion FY26 merchandise deficit is a record that the current export growth rate alone cannot close. But the services account is running at its strongest level in history, and the overall deficit of $7.81 billion is manageable. The challenge going into FY27 is not the aggregate trade number — it is whether the instruments being deployed to protect MSME exporters and to drive merchandise export growth actually reach the firms and sectors that are most exposed, at the speed the West Asia disruption demands.

Asad Yar Khan

Asad specializes in penning and overseeing blogs on study strategies, exam techniques, and key strategies for SSC, banking, regulatory body, engineering, and other competitive exams. During his 3+ years' stint at PracticeMock, he has helped thousands of aspirants gain the confidence to achieve top results. In his free time, he either transforms into a sleep lover, devours books, or becomes an outdoor enthusiast.

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