Capacity utilisation had improved gradually from 71 per cent in the aftermath of demonetisation to 76.1 per cent in January-March 2019.
Business
Standard : Capacity utilisation in India’s manufacturing
sector plummeted to 68.9 per cent in the September quarter (Q2 FY20),
its worst-ever level since 2008. It had reached a six-year high of 76
per cent two quarters ago, in March 2019, the Reserve Bank of India’s
monetary policy committee (MPC) said in a statement on Thursday.
Capacity
utilisation had improved gradually from 71 per cent in the aftermath
of demonetisation
to 76.1 per cent in January-March 2019.
“The
slowdown in manufacturing activity was also reflected in the decline
in capacity utilisation (CU) to 68.9 per cent in Q2FY20 from 73.6 per
cent in Q1 in the early results of the Reserve
Bank’s order books, inventories, and capacity utilisation
survey (OBICUS),” the statement said.
This
data corroborates the severity of the current slowdown in industry. A
sharp drop of 4.7 percentage points, from 73.6 per cent to 68.9 per
cent, is also unprecedented. Even the seasonally adjusted CU stood at
69.8 per cent. This indicates that whenever demand picks up from
here, companies would first improve capacity use, before investing
into new capacity.
Industry
players said they were indeed seeing a serious fall in capacity
usage, though some sectors were seeming to prevent further fall in
the overall CU.
India's
manufacturing capacity utilisation declines to the lowest ever
Cement
is one crucial industry segment, that indicates demand for
construction and infrastructure — be it roads, highways, or metro
projects. For India’s largest cement producer, UltraTech, CU fell
to 62 per cent in Q2 from 73 per cent in Q1, the company said.
Mahendra
Singhi, MD and CEO at Dalmia Bharat, and president of the Cement
Manufacturers Association, said there had been “de-growth” in
cement demand (sector level) in the last eight months.
“For
probably the first time, demand for cement from the rural contracted
in the first half of FY20. This is an area of great concern,” he
told Business Standard.
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