India Services Sector Growth Hits 17-Month Low as Hiring and Demand Falter
India's services sector expanded at its slowest pace in 17 months during June, as new business orders moderated and companies scaled back recruitment, according to industry data released on Monday. The downturn marks a significant reversal from the robust growth that had characterised the sector through much of the previous year, raising questions about the broader health of the economy.
PMI Data Reveals Sharp Slowdown
The S&P Global India Services PMI fell to 60.3 in June from 62.2 in May, its weakest reading since January of the previous year. Despite the decline, the index remained above the 50-point threshold that separates expansion from contraction, indicating that the sector is still growing — just at a considerably slower pace. New export orders, a bellwether for global demand, also lost momentum during the month.
Economists had expected a modest pullback, but the scale of the deceleration caught some analysts off guard. Input costs continued to rise, squeezing profit margins for service providers already facing uncertain demand conditions. Companies cited softer client spending, particularly in discretionary categories such as travel, entertainment, and professional services.
Hiring Freeze Takes Hold
Perhaps the most telling signal in the survey was the virtual halt in employment creation. The jobs sub-component of the PMI dropped sharply, with firms citing a combination of conservative hiring practices and uncertainty about the near-term demand outlook. Some companies indicated they were allowing natural attrition to reduce headcount rather than pursuing active redundancy programmes.
The employment slowdown contrasts sharply with the hiring boom that followed the post-pandemic recovery, when services firms scrambled to meet surging demand. For millions of workers who entered the sector during that period, the cooling job market represents a concrete shift in their employment prospects.
Consumer Spending Shows Fatigue
Demand weakness, the report suggested, stems partly from cautious consumer behaviour. Indian households have tightened spending in response to rising living costs, higher loan EMIs, and a uncertain macro environment. Retail and wholesale service providers reported softer footfalls and reduced transaction volumes across major urban centres.
The slowdown is not uniform across the country. Metros such as Mumbai, Delhi, and Bengaluru continue to outperform smaller cities, where economic headwinds are hitting harder. Rural service providers, already grappling with agrarian distress, reported some of the weakest conditions in the survey.
Inflation Remains a Pressure Point
Input costs for service providers rose for the twenty-second consecutive month, though the rate of inflation eased slightly compared with May. Firms absorbed some of the cost increases rather than passing them fully to customers, a strategy that has begun to compress margins across the sector.
Price pressures have been particularly acute in sectors reliant on logistics, real estate, and technology infrastructure. Software services firms, a cornerstone of India's export economy, have faced rising talent costs amid ongoing competition for skilled workers.
Private Sector Confidence Dips
Business expectations for the year ahead softened to a multi-quarter low, though optimism remained firmly in positive territory. Companies cited concerns about global economic conditions, domestic monetary policy, and competitive pressures as factors weighing on sentiment.
Some firms indicated they were postponing expansion plans or capital expenditure programmes pending greater clarity on the demand environment. This caution at the corporate level could have knock-on effects for investment-led growth in the wider economy.
What Happens Next
The Reserve Bank of India's monetary policy committee meets later this month to review interest rates. With inflation still above the target band and growth showing signs of fragility, policymakers face a delicate balancing act. A pause in the rate cycle could provide some relief to credit-intensive service sectors, while further tightening risks deepening the slowdown.
Analysts will be watching July's PMI reading closely for signs of whether the June weakness represents a temporary blip or the start of a more sustained downturn. For workers entering the job market and businesses planning investments, the coming weeks will offer critical clues about the direction of India's services economy through the second half of the year.
See Also
Read the full article on Satna News
Full Article →