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How India’s Exports Are Concentrated in a Few States

Why is it in News?

  • Recent analysis using the RBI Handbook of Statistics on Indian States 2024–25 shows Indias export growth is increasingly concentrated in a handful of States, raising concerns about:
    • Regional inequality
    • Jobless export growth
    • Breakdown of the traditional export–industrialisation–employment link
  • Despite a weakening rupee and record export values, export-led development is not translating into broad-based industrial employment.

Relevance

  • GS III – Indian Economy
    • Export-led growth model
    • Industrialisation and jobless growth
    • Capital deepening and labour absorption
  • GS I – Regional Development
    • Inter-State disparities
    • Core–periphery model

Core Export Concentration:

  • Top 5 exporting States:
    • Maharashtra
    • Gujarat
    • Tamil Nadu
    • Karnataka
    • Uttar Pradesh
  • Share of national exports:
    • ~65% (5 years ago)
    • ~70% now
  • Implication:
    • National export aggregates mask severe regional divergence.

Rising Geographic Concentration (HHI Evidence)

  • Export geography measured using HerfindahlHirschman Index (HHI):
    • Rising HHI → increasing concentration.
  • Pattern emerging:
    • Core–periphery structure
      • Coastal western & southern States → tightly integrated into global supply chains.
      • Northern & eastern hinterland → decoupling from export growth.
  • Agglomeration logic:
    • Firms prefer existing industrial clusters due to:
      • Logistics efficiency
      • Supplier ecosystems
      • Skilled labour pools

Global Context: Why Convergence Is Failing ?

Shrinking Global Trade Window

  • World Trade Organization data:
    • Merchandise trade volume growth slowed to 0.5–3% band.
  • UN Trade and Development (2023):
    • Top 10 exporters control ~55% of global merchandise trade.
  • Consequence:
    • Latecomers face entry barriers.
    • Global capital now seeks complexity, not just cheap labour.

Shift from Volume to Value

Economic Complexity Trap

  • Modern exports cluster around dense product spaces:
    • Automobiles
    • Electronics
    • Precision machinery
  • These sectors:
    • Require advanced logistics
    • Depend on accumulated industrial capabilities
  • Regions exporting low-complexity goods face:
    • High barriers to upgrading
    • Weak backward–forward linkages.

Export Growth ≠ Employment Growth

Capital Deepening Evidence

  • Annual Survey of Industries (ASI) 2022–23:
    • Fixed capital growth: +10.6%
    • Employment growth: +7.4%
    • Fixed capital per worker: ₹23.6 lakh
  • Indicates:
    • Rising capital–labour ratio
    • Factories becoming less labour-absorptive.

Manufacturing Employment Stagnation

  • Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS):
    • Manufacturing employment share:
      • Stuck at ~11.6–12%
    • Despite record export values.
  • Interpretation:
    • Employment elasticity of exports has collapsed.
    • Exports are generating value, not mass jobs.

Capital Bias & Wage Compression

  • ASI data shows:
    • Wage share in Net Value Added (NVA) declining.
    • Productivity gains in:
      • Petrochemicals
      • Electronics
    • Gains accrue disproportionately to capital owners.
  • Outcome:
    • High industrial GDP growth
    • Limited mass prosperity

Spatial Stickiness of New-Age Exports

  • Electronics exports (PLI-driven):
    • ~47% YoY growth
    • Locked into:
      • Kancheepuram (TN)
      • Noida (UP)
  • Reason:
    • High supply-chain complexity
    • Precision logistics unavailable in hinterland districts.

Financial Divide: Credit-Deposit Ratios

Coastal vs Hinterland

  • RBI Credit–Deposit (CD) ratios:
    • Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh: >90%
      • Local savings reinvested locally.
    • Bihar, eastern Uttar Pradesh: <50%
      • Savings mobilised but lent elsewhere.
  • Effect:
    • Capital flight from hinterland to coast
    • Reinforces regional divergence.

Structural Diagnosis

  • Exports no longer act as:
    • A bridge from agriculture → industry
    • A mass employment generator
  • Instead, exports are now:
    • An outcome of prior structural capacity
    • A mirror of accumulated industrial wealth.

Policy Implications

Why Old Assumptions Fail ?

  • Export-led growth ≠ labour-intensive industrialisation.
  • India bypassing East Asian trajectory of:
    • Low-skill manufacturing
    • Broad middle-class creation.

Need for New Metrics

  • Export growth ≠ inclusive development.
  • Policy must track:
    • Employment elasticity
    • Wage share
    • Regional diffusion
  • Otherwise:
    • Risk mistaking outcomes for instruments.

Bottom Line

  • India’s export success is real but narrow.
  • Without correcting:
    • Capital bias
    • Financial asymmetry
    • Human capital gaps
  • Export growth will deepen regional inequality rather than resolve it, making inclusive industrialisation increasingly elusive.

December 2025
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