Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Import tax on electronic­s hiked

- Remya Nair and Gireesh Chandra Prasad letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEW DELHI: The government on Friday raised customs duty on various electronic products, including mobile phones, microwave ovens and cameras, to boost local manufactur­ing and create jobs.

The increase in customs duty will give local manufactur­ers a cost advantage over imports. The move will also help the government boost customs duty collection at a time when goods and services tax (GST) receipts have fallen below expectatio­ns.

The move is likely to hit Apple, which imports all models of the iPhone except the SE to India. To be sure, the duty increase will not impact imports from countries such as Thailand and Malaysia, with which India has free trade agreements.

Customs duty has been increased by up to 10 percentage points, as per a notificati­on issued by the central board of excise and customs.

While it has been increased by 5 percentage points on items such as mobile phones, video recording devices, electricit­y meters, television cameras, digital cameras and video cameras, it has been raised by 10 percentage points on items like microwave ovens, lamps and lighting fixtures. Currently, these items attract a flat 10% basic customs duty (BCD) in addition to integrated GST (IGST).

It is the BCD which gives a tariff edge to local manufactur­ing as a cut in GST rate will equally benefit both imports and local production.

The rise in duty from 10% to 15% on handsets will make Apple’s iPhone models more expensive. Apple currently only assembles its iPhone SE model in India and imports the rest. The company has sought a range of incentives and tax relief from the government for it to expand its manufactur­ing in India.

“To foster the national initiative of Make in India, the government has raised the basic customs duty for various electronic products like mobile phones, microwave ovens, television sets, LED lamps and cameras. This would make import of these goods costlier and industry would be forced to explore domestic manufactur­e of these goods to reduce cost instead of importing these goods,” said Abhishek Jain, tax partner at EY.

Videocon Industries Ltd. welcomed the move saying local production will get a boost. “It will also encourage foreign consumer durable companies to manufactur­e products in India rather than import them, and go a long way in fulfilling the goal of making the country a global manufactur­ing hub for a wide range of electronic goods. However, it is too early to assess the impact of the customs duty hike on product pricing,” said Abhijit Kotnis, chief manufactur­ing officer, Videocon, in a note.

MS Mani, partner, Deloitte India said the move was unexpected so close to the union budget for 2018-19. “The customs duty increase appears to improve the case for manufactur­ing in India. However, there could be short-term price increases for some of the products unless there is a reduction in the GST rates for such products,” said Mani.

Besides incentivis­ing local production, the customs duty revision will also enable the authoritie­s to garner more revenue, said Pratik Jain, partner and leader of indirect taxes, PwC India.

GST revenue for the month of October (collected in November) had slipped to ~83,346 crore, lower than the ₹92,000 crore in had collected for the previous month. (With inputs from Reuters)

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