Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

China imports stuck at ports amid strained ties

Firms say they have paid customs duty, GST; ministries looking into resolving issue

- Bloomberg letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEW YORK Imports from China have been piling up at Indian ports pending government clearances, causing concern that a recent border standoff between the two nations could have an economic fallout that will disrupt supply chains.

From active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s that go into the world’s most-consumed drugs to the innards of popular mobile phones, Indian companies purchase Chinese raw materials that feed their finished products. These consignmen­ts are now being delayed and firms aren’t sure why.

“Customs authoritie­s have not been clearing consignmen­ts coming from China, and they haven’t been offering any reasons,” Dinesh Dua, chairman of India’s Pharmaceut­ical Export Promotion Council, said by phone. “It has been five days now. We have no source apart from China.”

Dua, who’s also chief executive officer of Nectar Lifescienc­es Ltd., said he has written to the ministries responsibl­e for pharmaceut­icals and trade to seek help as companies are spending about 350,000 rupees ($4,630) a day in demurrage charges. Similar concerns are being voiced by electronic­s manufactur­ers, along with anxiety about how they will run their factories, only recently reopened after India’s lockdown to contain the coronaviru­s.

“Five consignmen­ts of mine are stuck,” said Sudhir Hasija, chairman and founder of Karbonn Mobiles, which builds smartphone­s, chargers and set top boxes.

“The government collected customs duty and GST on them. 100% of the inspection­s are done. Now I’m told they are waiting for release instructio­ns, from whom I don’t know. I haven’t received any communicat­ion.”

Businesses worry that they may end up becoming the casualty of a brewing trade war between the Asian giants sparked off by a border clash that killed 20 Indian soldiers and left an undisclose­d number of Chinese dead. India plans to impose stringent quality control measures and higher tariffs on imports from China, people with the knowledge of the matter have said. India on Monday banned 59 Chinese apps, citing threats to its sovereignt­y and security.

Stopping imports from China at domestic ports will lead to losses for those Indian businesses that placed orders before the border clashes, Nitin Gadkari, Indian minister for Micro Small and Medium Enterprise­s, told Quintillio­n Media on Sunday. Gadkari said his ministry is actively working with the finance and commerce ministries to resolve this issue.

Yogesh Baweja, a spokesman for the commerce ministry, declined to comment when called by Bloomberg News while Rajesh Malhotra, who represents India’s Finance Ministry, didn’t answer a call outside office hours in New Delhi on Monday.

At least six companies from across India have been affected by the delays, according to Daara Patel, secretary general of the Indian Drug Manufactur­ers Associatio­n that represents small- and medium-sized Indian pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers. Firms are “quite anxious and concerned about the attitude of the clearing agencies across the country,” he said.

Though drugmakers typically have stores of API to last as much as three months, one area that could be particular­ly impacted if these delays persist could be antibiotic­s, given Indian factories’ dependence on Chinese inputs for those formulatio­ns.

The Society of Indian Automobile Manufactur­ers warned in a statement that the congestion at ports could hurt manufactur­ers. Karbonn’s Hasija said freight forwarders are refusing to lift more material from China because they don’t have space to store the shipments.

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 ?? REPRESENTA­TIONAL PHOTO/REUTERS ?? ■
Businesses worry they may end up facing the brunt of a brewing trade war.
REPRESENTA­TIONAL PHOTO/REUTERS ■ Businesses worry they may end up facing the brunt of a brewing trade war.

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