Business Standard

CUSTOMS OFFICIALS ASKED TO PUT CHINA SHIPMENTS ON HOLD

- DILASHA SETH & SHALLY SETH MOHILE

Amid heightened tensions along the Line of Actual Control with China, stalled customs clearance of cargo from Beijing has sent importers and manufactur­ers into a tizzy. Though officials said the move was based on specific intelligen­ce related to narcotics smuggling and illegal imports of undervalue­d items, industry saw it as a trade retaliator­y measure.

Getting shipments from China may only get tougher going forward, industry fears.

On Monday night, customs officials in Chennai and Visakhapat­nam were asked to put all shipments from China on hold until further orders.

“The Customs has been informally asked to stall clearance of all consignmen­ts from China, be it by sea or air, following intel inputs on smuggling of narcotics (worth

~30 crore). While this is unusual, it cannot be seen as a trade retaliatio­n as it will only hurt our own industry that is currently heavily dependent on raw materials from China,” said a government official. The Chennai Customs Brokers’ Associatio­n confirmed the developmen­t and said it was “in touch” with the officials.

Another official pointed out the government is also trying to discourage the influx of undervalue­d goods from China which is hurting the domestic smalland medium-scale industry.

The developmen­t coincided with the government making it mandatory for sellers to mention “country of origin” on products to be sold on the government’s procuremen­t portal Government e-marketplac­e (GEM).

An industry representa­tive said while the official reason may be "intel input", the underlying reason could be the government trying to discourage Chinese imports and pressing industry to look for alternativ­es. “Only because of smuggling, the government will not put on hold all the shipments originatin­g from a country. The government wants industry to look for other sources for raw materials, but it is not going to be costeffect­ive at the moment. This is just the beginning. Trade with China will only get tougher going forward, hurting our own industry,” he said.

With most sectors, including pharmaceut­icals, electronic­s, and auto, heavily dependent on raw material from China, companies are busy scouting for alternativ­e, cost-effective sources. India’s $120 -billion auto industry sources 8-20 per cent of its annual requiremen­t from China, show industry estimates.

“We need a thorough reworking of the value chain. The logistics cost is less if you import from China, than shipping material from Chennai to Ludhiana. Import substituti­on will have a huge cost ramificati­on,” said another industry leader.

The bilateral trade between China and India was worth $88 billion in FY19, with a trade deficit of $53.5 billion in China’s favour.

The government is planning to curtail imports from China on at least 300 nonessenti­al items by way of either duty hikes and imposing non-tariff barriers by increasing compliance requiremen­t, such as tighter quality controls and licensing.

“The aim is to protect the Indian market from cheap sub-standard imports,” said another government official.

Chennai Customs in a reply on Twitter over shipments from China said: "Prima facie allowing import of prime goods from China that are lower in price than the stock lots or the cost of production severely harms local industry, mainly MSMES. The government is keen to ensure an Atmanirbha­r Bharat by encouragin­g Make in India.”

On Monday night, customs officials in Chennai and Visakhapat­nam were asked to put all shipments from China on hold until further orders

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