What is Export Competitiveness?
Historical Background
Key Points
8 points- 1.
Price Competitiveness: Heavily influenced by exchange rates (a weaker rupee generally makes exports cheaper), production costs (labor, raw materials, energy), taxation policies, and subsidies.
- 2.
Non-Price Competitiveness: Includes factors like product quality, innovation, brand reputation, delivery reliability, after-sales service, marketing effectiveness, and adherence to international standards.
- 3.
Infrastructure: Efficient logistics, modern ports, robust transportation networks, and reliable digital infrastructure are crucial for timely and cost-effective exports.
- 4.
Policy Support: Government schemes like RoDTEP (Remission of Duties and Taxes on Exported Products), MEIS (Merchandise Exports from India Scheme - now replaced), and PLI schemes (Production Linked Incentive) provide incentives and support to exporters.
- 5.
Global Factors: Global demand, trade agreements (e.g., FTAs), tariffs, non-tariff barriers, and geopolitical stability significantly impact export competitiveness.
- 6.
Product and Market Diversification: Expanding the range of export products and exploring new markets helps reduce reliance on a few sectors or regions, enhancing resilience.
- 7.
Real Effective Exchange Rate (REER): A higher REER indicates a loss of price competitiveness for exports, as domestic goods become relatively more expensive for foreign buyers.
- 8.
Impact on Economy: Strong export competitiveness leads to higher GDP growth, job creation, increased foreign exchange earnings, a healthier Balance of Payments, and improved current account balance.
Recent Developments
4 developmentsGovernment's continued focus on "Make in India" and Production Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes to boost domestic manufacturing and make it globally competitive.
Efforts to diversify India's export basket and explore new markets, especially through signing Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) with various countries/blocs.
Challenges from global economic slowdown, rising protectionism, and disruptions in global supply chains.
The news highlights that RBI's rupee policy, by leading to real appreciation, is inadvertently harming India's export competitiveness.
