The Indian textile industry, the country's second-largest foreign exchange earner, will lose half a million jobs by April 2009 due to the global financial crisis, a government official warned Friday. The sector is estimated to employ around 38 million workers and accounts for about eight percent of the gross domestic product of Asia's third-largest economy.
"According to the estimates of the textile ministry, there will be job losses of about 500,000 in the next five months," Commerce Secretary G.K. Pillai told reporters in New Delhi. Pillai said the sector was facing a severe crunch because of deepening problems in the world economy, but stressed that New Delhi was cobbling together a package for the "distressed export sector".
"The package, which may include a cut in interest rates and increased credit for exporting firms, will go to a committee chaired by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh next week," he said. The textile sector accounts for 20 percent of India's industrial production and more than 30 percent of the country's export earnings, according to government figures. Pillai said the overall export growth rate was likely to slide to 10 percent in the financial year ending March 31, 2009.
"The target of 200 billion dollars will come down," he said on the sidelines of an economic workshop. Indian exports grew by over 30 percent in the first half of the financial year but demand has slumped amid the global slowdown. The Federation of Chambers of Commerce and Industries in a recent study said the sector's growth slipped from eight percent in 2005 to 0.8 percent during April-August this year and warned of massive layoffs in the coming months.
The Confederation of Indian Industries (CII) trade lobby also said India's garment exports too dipped by up to 35 percent during July-September in the current financial year. The United States and the European Union account for 65 percent of India's total garments exports.