Last year among all the sectors that were badly hit by the
squeezing of the global vis-á-vis the Indian economy, it was the textile
sector. Its probable impact on the sector could be gauged from the fact that
the government had to send a Save-Our-Soul message to determine the impact of
job loss in this sector, followed with not one but two consecutive fiscal
stimulus packages.
Its irony that this has taken place on a sector that till
July, 2008 was eulogized as a "Sunrise Sector", that will engage
17.37 million people alone up to 2012. However, coming to the end of the year
2008 it started showing the symptoms of a "Sunset" sector.
The contribution of textile sector, according to the annual
report 2007-08, is 14 per cent to industrial production, 4 per cent to the GDP,
and 17 per cent to the country's export earnings.
The roller-coaster ride of the sector in the last fiscal
came with the drastic erosion of its cost competitiveness that Indian textiles
exporters had enjoyed in the US, EU and Canada, and also in the markets of U.A.E.,
Japan, Bangladesh and Turkey. The Index of Industrial Production (IIP) in this
sector in September saw 4.9 per cent, in October it went to a negative
territory registering minus 7.1 per cent. High input and transaction costs also
bleed the sector profusely.
The export basket that consists of items like cotton yarn
and fabrics, man-made yarn and fabrics, wool and silk fabrics, made-ups and
variety of garments, the 'handicraft' export dips negative 2.46 %. In the
months April-May 2007 it was Rs.812.55 crore while it was Rs.833.05 crore in
the same months in 2008. Natural silk yarn, fabrics and made-ups also
registered negative 16.31% growth from Rs.270.46 in April-May 2007 to Rs.226.35
crore in the corresponding months in 2008. The export of textile based products
in the month July-September 2008 saw 30 to 35% dip.
The negative growth of export in 'handicraft' is a matter of
concern, especially for the North Eastern Region, since the area
enjoys the highest concentration of handlooms in the country. According to 1995-96
Handloom Census, out of 25.4 lakh units engaged in handloom activities, 14.6
lakh units (household and non-house hold) are concentrated in Assam, Manipur, Arunachal
Pradesh, Nagaland and Tripura. Of the 13.4% contribution in
the commercial looms of the country from these states, the total production of
handloom fabric is merely 20%.
When things have been going wrong in the domestic and
international markets, the condition of textile sector in the northeastern states
is not away from anybody's guess. The sector in the region has been marred with
difficulties in the absorption of funds, which has been posed as a greater
impediment in the way of its growth. It includes delay in submission of
proposals, non release of the States governments' share in case of Centrally
Sponsored Scheme and non-submission of utilization certificates, the absence of
infrastructure facilities and of credible Non Government Organisations are
other problems that infest the sector, hence the exports prospect originating
from the region.
The dip in the export prospects started happening at the
time when the target set for the export of textile-based product for the year
2007-08 was US$ 25.06 billion, while the actual exports performance touched US$
22 billion, as per the provisional figures. However, there has been an increase
of US$ 2.3 billion compared to the exports performance in the year 2006-07.
On the other hand, at the import front, it was not rosy,
even. The import of raw jute declined minus 26% from Rs.16.77 crore in April-May
2007 to Rs.12.41 crore in the same months in the year 2008. Notwithstanding,
investments in the sector was also badly hit; there was a 66% decline in
investments in the period April-August 2008-09, compared to 2005-06.
The textile sector which is the largest employer in the
country with more than 3.5 crore workers, in November came out with a
disturbing figure that in 6 months, 7 lakh workers had lost their jobs in the
contraction of the global economy that had a cascading affect on the sector.
And in the next 3 months, 12 lakh more jobs will be axed, the media
reported.