NE BUSINESS BUREAU
NEW DELHI, AUG 7
NCAER’s Business Confidence Index (BCI), an indicator of the business sentiment across the Indian industry, stood at 46.4 in the first quarter of 2020-21, a drop of 40.1 percent from its level of 77.4 in the previous quarter.
It fell 62 percent in the June 2020 quarter on a year-on-year (y-o-y) basis, according to a survey by the National Council of Applied Economic Research (NCAER).
“This is the lowest that the BCI has ever fallen in the history of 113 Rounds of the NCAER Business Expectations Survey (BES),” the think-tank said on Friday.
The decline of 40.1 percent in the BCI came on the back of a 30.4 percent quarter-on-quarter decline in the BCI in April 2020.
NCAER said the BCI tracks the business sentiments of around 600 Indian companies to compute the composite index.
The NCAER survey elicits responses from firms across six cities to assess business sentiments in the four regions of India: Delhi-NCR represents the north; Mumbai and Pune, the west; Kolkata, the east; and Bengaluru and Chennai represent the south, it said.
The BES has been carried out on a quarterly basis since 1991 by NCAER.
The think-tank said the latest, 113th Round of the BES, was carried out in June 2020, when the country had started slowly opening up after more than two months of lockdown due to the coronavirus pandemic, following which, the spread of the disease accelerated.
According to the survey findings, the proportion of respondents expecting that ”overall economic conditions will improve in the next six months” fell 9 percentage points, from 26.1 percent to 17.1 percent between the fourth quarter of FY20 and the first quarter of FY21.
The proportion of respondents expecting that ”financial position of firms will improve in the next six months” decreased 7.7 percentage points, from 27.5 percent in the March 2020 quarter to 19.8 percent in the June 2020 quarter, NCAER said.
“There was an across-the-board decline in sentiments on a q-o-q basis in Q1: 2020-21 for all five sectors that the BES covers,” NCAER said.
The BCI for the consumer durables sector fell 38.2 percent, for the consumer non-durables sector by 41.4 percent, for the intermediate goods sector by 60.3 percent, for the capital goods sector by 30.7 percent, and for the services sector by 35.2 percent.
Further, the BCI for private limited companies fell 34.8 percent in the first quarter of 2020-21 from the previous quarter, while the BCI for public limited companies dropped a much greater 47.4 percent. The BCI for partnerships/individually-owned companies plunged by an even larger 48.3 percent.
Also, also the BES’ Political Confidence Index fell from 73.7 in January-March 2020 period to 63.1 in the first quarter of 2020-21, falling by 14.4 percent on a q-o-q basis and by 50.1 percent on a year-on-year basis.