Indian Economy (14 Viewers)


View: https://twitter.com/amitabhk87/status/1947904762881708362?s=19



Everybody seems to know where the problem lies , it's just nobody wants to come up with a solution.

It’s simple stop being biased. Panipat and rather haryana was textile hub of india. Now most of the industry is thrown out .
Specially it WA’s run by small msme , lot of people were employed. So money distribution went till the smallest unit or poorest.

because of no support no infra no electricity and gst. Most people are venturing into other profession.

It’s just like everything else . For every 100 rupees given by Haryana as revenue to center it receive only 16 to 18 rupees back as investment.

If you want to develop industrial capacity you have to let small player enter and not just let it for big giants. Also take care of whole nation specially old hubs like Tripura Andra panipat Gurgaon. Or else economy is bound to go down the ditch.
 
he is basically saying, the country should import more from china.
Depends on what the end game is I guess . Follow the old formula of final assembly here & work your way up the value chain thru incentive schemes like PLI like we're doing in electronics & like the Chinese have done across sectors
 
Depends on what the end game is I guess . Follow the old formula of final assembly here & work your way up the value chain thru incentive schemes like PLI like we're doing in electronics & like the Chinese have done across sectors

he is not within gormint anymore, being outside of the gormint his opinions have same value as oped writers.

 
he is not within gormint anymore, being outside of the gormint his opinions have same value as oped writers.

I'm aware he's no longer with the government. However that doesn't take away from the facts he's bringing out .

The only objection one can possibly have is with what he was doing about this sector when he was with the Niti Aayog.
 

View: https://twitter.com/amitabhk87/status/1947904762881708362?s=19



Everybody seems to know where the problem lies , it's just nobody wants to come up with a solution.


Went for chat gpt for what's going on . Gives a good summery of whats going on ....




Here's a detailed comparison between India and China in polyester and viscose production capacities:


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🧵 Polyester (Man‑Made Fibres)

China

In 2017, China accounted for 58% of global polyester staple fibre production (~9.03 million t) .

It also led polyester filament yarn production with 70% of world capacity, while India had about 9% (~3.5 Mt) .

By 2024 Q3, China operated at ~93% capacity in polyester filament with chemical fibre output reaching 58.6 million t in first 9 months .


India

Polyester staple fibre production was ~1.51 Mt in 2017, around 10% of global capacity .

Polyester filament yarn capacity stood at ~3.5 Mt in 2017 (~9% share) .

Domestic price pressures: India pays ~$70/ton more for PTA, squeezing margins versus China .



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🌿 Viscose (Rayon)

China

Viscose staple fibre (VSF) capacity was ~5.245 Mt in 2020 .

Holds ~60% of global VSF production, increasing from ~1.68 Mt (2011) to 3.67 Mt (2017) .

Leading viscose filament yarn (VFY) producer with 72% of world capacity in 2017 .


India

VSF capacity was ~0.50 Mt (500 kT) in 2017, about 2nd globally after China .

India’s viscose filament yarn capacity was ~0.06 Mt in 2017 (~21% world share) .

Energy inefficiencies: some plants lose 18–22% energy due to outdated tech .

Fibre prices in India are now closer to China’s, signaling growing competitiveness .



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📊 Comparative Summary

Screenshot_2025-07-24-06-39-39-68_96b26121e545231a3c569311a54cda96.webp


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🔍 Key Takeaways

1. China dominates both polyester and viscose markets, controlling ~60–70% of global capacities.


2. India holds smaller yet significant shares: ~10% in polyester staple fibres and up to ~21% in viscose filament yarn.


3. India is the world’s #2 producer for both VSF and VFY.


4. Challenges for India include higher raw‑material costs (PTA), older plants with lower energy efficiency, and reliance on imports.


5. Opportunities exist: India’s fibre prices are converging with China’s, capacity utilisation is near 90%, and PLI scheme and new polyester park investments may boost competitiveness .




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🌟 Outlook

China continues expanding and enhancing its polyester & viscose fibre capacity, with significant investment in chemical fibres (e.g., Q1–Q3 2024 saw 1.16 Mt new polyester capacity) .

India is modernising with schemes like PLI and textile parks, aiming to reduce PTA dependency and close the quality-price gap .

Conclusion

🔹 China leads by a wide margin, owning around 6–7 times more capacity than India in both polyester and viscose globally.

🔹 India is a strong contender, ranking second in both categories, improving its competitive stance with evolving prices, investments, and policy support.
 

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