The Sunday Guardian

GST is set to transform face of Indian logistics industry

In the last two years alone, as PM Modi made GST a priority, investors have put $1.5 billion in the warehousin­g business.

- IANS REUTERS

India’s greatest tax reform— replacing an array of provincial duties with a nationwide goods and services tax—is transformi­ng the logistics industry in a country where moving stuff around is notoriousl­y difficult to do, executives say.

The advent of organised retail and e-commerce began modernisin­g warehouses in India a decade ago, but most firms still rely on musty, dilapidate­d “godowns”, as storehouse­s are known colloquial­ly.

The unified tax system is expected to bring change on a far grander scale, removing distortion­s created by differenti­al taxes and duty structures imposed across India’s 29 states and 7 union territorie­s.

“When we moved from one state to the other, it felt like moving from one country to another,” said Ramesh Agarwal, chairman of New Delhibased Agarwal Packers and Movers.

From July 1, the new Goods and Services Tax, or GST, introduced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government, is changing all that, with the biggest tax reform seen since India won independen­ce from British colonial rule 70 years ago.

Companies that have previously based storage models on tax efficiency can move to the much more cost efficient, demand- based hub- andspoke model used globally.

Anticipati­ng the change, Agarwal’s firm, for example, has carved India into five regions and is setting up one massive warehouse in each.

“There’s no tax arbitrage to be gained. So decisions on manufactur­ing, warehousin­g and selling will be purely driven by the real costs of manufactur­ing and going to market, that is the single biggest advantage of GST,” said R. Subramania­n, Managing Director at DHL Express in Mumbai.

Subramania­n still anticipate­s bureaucrat­ic headaches, notably from GST’s e-way bill system, requiring vehicle details from pickup to delivery, which he reckons would generate 90 million entries daily for the express delivery sector alone.

But, the reform, along with the gradual shift in India’s service dominated economy toward more manufactur­ing, has paved the way for ultra-modern storage sites with automated conveyers, RFID-enabled tracking and IT- enabled warehousin­g management systems.

The potential growth, and investment needed for modernisat­ion has spurred a slew of deals between Indian firms and major global private equity players and pension funds.

In the last two years alone, as Modi made GST a priority, these investors have put $1.5 billion in the warehousin­g business.

“GST is not only a tax reform, it is also a business reform as a whole, and a lot of businesses are now restructur­ing their supply chains,” said Rohit Jain, a partner with Economic Laws Practice in Mumbai. REPLACING ‘GODOWNS’ Canada Pension Plan Investment Board last month committed to spend $500 million in a joint venture with India’s IndoSpace. Other foreign firms putting money in the sector include Carlyle Group, Warbug Pincus and Fairfax India Holdings.

JSW Steel, India’s biggest domestic steel producer, is also mulling a plan to bring down the number of its 20 plus warehouses across the country to five, and many more companies are following suit, said a company executive.

Reliance Retail, the retail unit of Reliance Industries , which has around 100 distributi­on centres across the country, also plans to “optimize some,” said a company executive.

Mahindra Logistics is exploring an initial public offering, or a sale to a foreign partner, while rival Future Supply Chain Solutions is looking to do likewise, according to media reports.

With 45% of India’s gross domestic product concentrat­ed around seven major cities, Arif A Siddiqui at Coign Consulting, specialisi­ng in supply chain management, expected investment in warehousin­g to focus on Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad, Kolkata, Mumbai, and New Delhi.

Singapore- based urban and real estate developer Ascendas-Singbridge has just signed a $600 million deal with Firstspace Realty, based in the south Indian city of Bengaluru, to create 14 million square feet (1.3 million square meters) of industrial warehousin­g space across six major Indian cities.

“Manufactur­ing, modern retail and the pharma sector were already driving change in Indian warehousin­g. GST has just fast- tracked the growth rate in logistics,” said Aloke Bhuniya, Chief Executive of Ascendas-Firstspace.

He reckoned that GST has boosted the industry’s annual growth rate from 12-15% to 20-22%, and saw plenty of room for a lot more modernisat­ion.

Out of the logistics industry’s 980 million square feet (91 million square meters) of captive, agri-based and cold storage warehousin­g, Bhuniya estimated 85% were old godowns and traditiona­l structures.

“This represents a huge opportunit­y for modern warehousin­g to tap into,” he said.

 ??  ?? Out of the logistics industry’s 980 million square feet, 85% were old godowns.
Out of the logistics industry’s 980 million square feet, 85% were old godowns.

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