PMI manufacturing plunged to 27.4 last month from March's 51.8, by
far its lowest since the survey began in March 2005.
India's
manufacturing activity contracted at its sharpest pace on record in April
as a lockdown to combat the rapid spread of the coronavirus led to a slump in
demand and massive supply chain disruptions, a private sector survey showed on
Monday.
Asia's third-largest economy is taking a huge hit from the ongoing nationwide lockdown, which started on March 25, and its gross domestic product is expected to shrink for the first time since the mid-1990s this quarter, a Reuters poll showed last month.
That was despite
the government announcing a spending package of Rs 1.7 trillion ($22.4 billion)
and a significant easing in monetary policy by the Reserve Bank of India.
The Nikkei
Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index , compiled by IHS Markit, plunged to
27.4 last month from March's 51.8, by far its lowest since the survey began in
March 2005 and its first time below the 50-mark separating growth from
contraction in nearly three years.
"After making
it through March relatively unscathed, the Indian manufacturing sector felt the
full force of the coronavirus pandemic in April," noted Eliot Kerr,
economist at IHS Markit.
"Record
contractions in output, new orders and employment pointed to a severe
deterioration in demand conditions." With new orders and output shrinking
at the steepest pace since at least early 2005 factories cut jobs at the
fastest rate in the survey's history, signaling a high chance of recession.
And indicating
major supply-side disruptions, a sub-index tracking supplier's delivery times
declined to a level not seen since the survey began.
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