India’s gems and jewellery exports tumble 41% on raw material shortage

17 Jul 2013 Evaluate

India’s gems and jewellery exports tumbled 41 per cent to $2.3 billion in June, 2013 as compared to $4 billion in the corresponding month previous year mainly due to shortage of yellow metal and limited inventory in domestic market. The major reason behind the shortage of raw-material for jewellery manufacturing was the government's move to curb gold imports. Though, the industry is expected to get a sufficient raw-material supply for jewellery manufacturing as the shortage is a short-term phenomenon.

India imported around 830 tonnes of gold in 2012-13. The government hiked the import duty on gold thrice in a year and raised it recently by 2 per cent to 8 per cent to curb demand. Besides, RBI too has put restrictions on banks on importing gold. Gold imports in June too are projected to have plunged to around 31 tonnes as against 162 tonnes in May and 141 tonnes in April. High imports strain the Current Account Deficit (CAD), which hit a record high of 4.8 per cent in the 2012-13 fiscal.

Meanwhile, jewellery exports declined 73 per cent as there were no outbound shipments of gold medallions and coins in June 2013. However, silver jewellery exports were up 52 per cent and outward shipments of cut and polished diamonds jumped about 22 per cent. On cumulative basis, the gems and jewellery exports declined 13.2 per cent year-on-year to $8.5 billion during April-June 2013.

India is the largest importer of gold which is mainly utilised to meet demand of the jewellery industry and the major markets for the country’s jewellery exports are the US, Europe, Middle-East, Hong Kong and Japan.

© 2026 The Alchemists Ark Pvt. Ltd. All rights reserved. MoneyWorks4Me ® is a registered trademark of The Alchemists Ark Pvt. Ltd.

×