Service exports are no longer being driven by IT services alone but also by more lucrative offerings such as consulting and research and development, analysts and economists told Reuters.
The services surplus, which deducts any imports in the category, also rose 39.21% to a record $38.7 billion.
“We expect services exports to grow to over $375 billion by March 2024, as compared to $320-350 billion for the year ending March 2023,” said Sunil Talati, chairman of the Services Export Promotion Council.
October-December merchandise exports stood at $105.6 billion, according to latest RBI data. IT services still accounted for 45% of India’s total services exports in April-December.
The recent growth in services exports has been largely powered by global capability centres, which have started to offer global clients a range of high-end and critical solutions such as accounting and legal support.
Over the last two to three years, there has been a rapid growth in global capability centres, said Sangeeta Gupta, chief strategy officer at software industry lobby group Nasscom.
According to Pranjul Bhandari, chief India economist at HSBC Securities and Capital Markets, such centres started off providing support functions, but they have now moved up the ladder to tech enablement, business operations, capability development, and even R&D and business development.
An acceleration in digitalisation after the Covid crisis and a lack of adequate tech talent in some of these countries are key factors, she added.
EXTERNAL SHIELD
“We now revise our CAD estimates for 2022-23 and 2023-24 to 2% ($68 billion) and 1.4% of GDP ($53 billion)respectively, from 2.6% and 2% earlier, said Vivek Kumar, an economist at QuantEco Research.
“India has a comparative advantage in services exports, particularly in software services. There is room for further growth with India’s share in world commercial services exports currently just at around 4%.”
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