One of the lessons of Financial crises is that large countries (in terms of population) don't necessarily deserve to be seen in the same way as smaller niche countries. The reason is that internal demand is huge. Falling exports is a worry, yet in a time of falling exports, we are seeing industrial output soar. Electronics, cement, automotive and pharma and textiles are experiencing unprecedented demands.
Textiles is an interesting thing, its booming, because they are making more money selling internally than they did selling overseas. Many large concerns have shifted to relying on domestic consumers as opposed to foreign buyers (who are unreliable). So while the reduction in exports on face of it makes alarming reading, its not the whole story.
Another problem is that some our largest industries are not (yet) selling overseas. Electronics, consumer goods, pharma, cement are huge parts of our economy and yet (except for pharam) we have minimal presence overseas.
Textiles is an interesting thing, its booming, because they are making more money selling internally than they did selling overseas. Many large concerns have shifted to relying on domestic consumers as opposed to foreign buyers (who are unreliable). So while the reduction in exports on face of it makes alarming reading, its not the whole story.
Another problem is that some our largest industries are not (yet) selling overseas. Electronics, consumer goods, pharma, cement are huge parts of our economy and yet (except for pharam) we have minimal presence overseas.