Industrial Credit Growth in India

Syllabus: Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilization of resources, growth, development and employment.

Role of Banking Sector

  • The banking system channels household savings to industries, supporting investment, production, and employment.
  • Historically, industrial credit growth and industrial output have moved closely together.

Fact 1: Declining Share of Industrial Credit

  • Industrial credit share in total bank credit declined from 42% in 2013 to 23% in 2024.
  • This fall is unprecedented in the last fifty years of Indian banking history.
  • Credit diversion towards services and personal loans reduced industrial sector access.
  • Personal loans recently surpassed industrial credit in total credit composition.

Fact 2: Prolonged Weak Credit Growth

  • Nominal industrial credit grew at only 4.1% CAGR during 2014–24.
  • Earlier decades recorded much higher growth: 16% (1974–90), 14% (1990–2004), 23% (2004–14).
  • Excluding pandemic years, 2014–19 growth remained equally low at 4.1%.
  • Indicates a structural slowdown rather than a cyclical shock.

Fact 3: Regional and Sectoral Trends

  • Industrially advanced regions such as western, southern, and northern India showed below-average credit growth.
  • Higher growth in central and northeastern regions reflects their lower initial credit base.
  • Across industry groups, no sector achieved double-digit credit growth during 2014–24.
  • This contrasts sharply with uniform double-digit growth during 2004–14.

Fact 4: Stagnation in Financial Deepening

  • Bank credit-to-GDP ratio rose sharply in late 1990s and early 2010s.
  • Since then, it stagnated around 50%–55% of GDP.
  • Compared globally, India lags countries like China, Japan, Brazil, and South Africa.

The Core Puzzle: FY17–FY19 Decoupling

  • Historically, industrial credit and ASI-GVA growth show strong correlation.
  • Long-term correlation reached 0.82 during 2004–2020.
  • Between 2016–17 and 2018–19, industrial credit and ASI-GVA declined, but industrial GDP remained flat.
  • This anomaly suggests possible overestimation of industrial GDP in the current NAS (2011–12) series.
  • IMF’s downgrade of India’s GDP estimates to ‘C’ status reinforces concerns.

Conclusion

  • The persistent slowdown in industrial credit and the FY17–FY19 decoupling require deeper investigation.
  • Accurate GDP measurement and revival of industrial credit are essential for sustainable industrial growth.

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