Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Joint venture firms struggle without minor machinery components

- By Bandula Sirimanna

Several joint venture manufactur­ers have been forced to shutdown their production plants and suspend expansion plans due to restrictio­ns in the import of components and essential spares needed to run the machinery.

The government has indefinite­ly extended import restrictio­ns introduced for three months from May 22 amidst the COVID-19 crisis and a foreign exchange shortage, according to a new set of guidelines i s s u e d by Presidenti­al Secretary Dr. P.B. Jayasunder­a.

The Secretaria­t justifies the measures on the grounds it’s needed to tackle current account deficit and lack of foreign currency.

Essential raw material and machinery and components are allowed after strict scrutiny of import documents with less than 90 day credit terms from foreign buyers.

This has a side effect on foreign direct investment­s and new joint venture projects. Manufactur­ers including apparel factories were used to import spares and components for machinery and many small items such as clip pins and labels on open payment terms earlier, several industrial­ists said.

But under the new restrictio­ns no such items can be imported and such consignmen­ts cannot be cleared from

Manufactur­ers including apparel factories were used to import spares and components for machinery and many small items such as clip pins and labels on open payment terms earlier, several industrial­ists said.

Customs unless those were on 90 day credit term, they complained.

No foreign supplier will agree for such payment terms, they said adding that banks are also prohibited in such transactio­ns.

The notificati­on also stipulates that when advance payments are required on goods to be imported that exceed the value of US$ 50,000, banks shall not effect full or partial payment unless presented with a bank guarantee, standby letter of credit, or the explicit approval of the Import and Export Control Department.

One of the victims of this directive is BOI- approved Trinity Steel Private Ltd which was in operation since 2017 at the Katunayake Export Processing Zone which had to suspend their expansion plan under this set up, informed industry sources revealed.

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