The Sunday Guardian

EXECS FROM APPLE MEET GOVT OFFICIALS IN INDIA

- CORRESPOND­ENT

A team from Apple on Wednesday met officials of the Commerce and other ministries to seek tax concession­s for manufactur­ing and setting up its stores in India. “We’ve been working hard to develop our operations in India and are proud to deliver the best products and services in the world to our customers here. We appreciate the constructi­ve and open dialogue we’ve had with the government about further expanding our local operations,” an Apple India spokespers­on told IANS. Apple officials on Tuesday met Commerce Minister Nirmala Sitharaman to discuss the issues involved. “They (Apple) are putting forth their demands and the government has to consider these. It has to take a 360-degree view, as others (foreign companies) are already here. They want some tax concession­s,” a Commerce Ministry source told IANS. “In this case, maybe, they are asking for more and let’s see how it goes. “They (Apple) met the minister (Sitharaman) yesterday (Tuesday). Both the parties discussed the issues. Today (Wednesday) they met all the other ministry officials. Nothing is being talked about. They have a list of demands that will be shared,” the source added. However, the ministry officials believe the whole process is still in the initial stages as of now, as there are still several stages to go and a consensus needs to be reached from all ministries involved. “It is very rudimentar­y as of now. There are several stages to cover. They will meet the officials, make a presentati­on, tell what they want. The government has to decide what has to be given and what not. These are simple meetings going on,” a source told IANS. “It is not DIPP (Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion) alone but several ministries in it. It all depends on how things move. There needs to be a consensus from everyone,” the source added. Apple wants India to waive taxes and duties on imports in exchange for setting up local manufactur­ing units. The tech giant had, last year, applied for tax concession­s and relaxation in domestic sourcing norm which were rejected by the Finance Ministry. Last year, Apple’s demands were rejected because of the rules. But with the tweaking of the Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) rules, the US company is hoping to be lucky this time. Apple sold 2.5 million units in India last year (with one third of its total shipment coming from fourth quarter driven by seasonalit­y and iPhone7). Apple was 10th in the smartphone rankings during the fourth quarter of 2016 and a leader in the premium segment (above $450) where it had 62% market share. IANS

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