The main factors contributing to the above-50.0 PMI reading were growth of both new orders and output as market conditions returned to normal and led to subsequent improvement in demand.
Manufacturing sector rebounded from demonetisation downturn in January amid rising order books, production as well as buying levels and the expansion in the sector is likely to pick up pace in coming months, says a monthly survey.
The Nikkei Markit India Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) -- an indicator of manufacturing activity -- increased to 50.4 in January from 49.6 in December.
A reading above 50 indicates expansion while any score below the mark denotes contraction.
"The Indian manufacturing economy recovered from the one-off downturn that hit the sector in December following the withdrawal of high-value banknotes," said Pollyanna De Lima, Economist at IHS Markit and author of the report.
The main factors contributing to the above-50.0 PMI reading were growth of both new orders and output as market conditions returned to normal and led to subsequent improvement in demand.
Lima further noted that the improving confidence among firms bodes well for the outlook, with the expansion in manufacturing output likely to pick up pace in coming months.
IHS Markit forecasts a 6.9 per cent growth in GDP for 2015-16, anticipating an acceleration to 7.4 per cent in 2016-17.
"January saw only modest increases in order books, production and buying levels, but the quick rebound will be welcome news to policymakers," Lima said.
However, in contrast to the upturn in total new business, new export orders fell again. Export orders eased since the previous month (December), but the rate of reduction was 'marginal', the survey said.
On the prices front, input cost inflation climbed to its highest mark since August 2014 (29-month high), while output charges were raised for the 11th successive month.
Though greater production encourages companies to purchase more inputs, it failed to generate jobs in the sector.
"Firms scale up buying levels, but leave payroll numbers unchanged", it said.
Photograph: Amit Dave/Reuters