Business Standard

Only two broad changes in FTP

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or directly impact exporters or importers. The FTP, a notificati­on with statutory force, is simultaneo­usly issued, with a Handbook of Procedures. These deal with the rights, obligation­s, entitlemen­ts, schemes and procedures directly affecting exporters and importers. My comments are on the FTP, not the FTPS.

Under the Merchandis­e Exports from India Scheme, entitlemen­ts have been raised by two percentage points for certain items. These include goods covered under labour-intensive sectors such as readymade garments and made-ups, leather, footwear, handmade carpets, handloom, coir, jute, agricultur­e and marine products. High technology products such as telecom and electronic­s components, and medical and surgical equipment, also get higher entitlemen­ts. These incentives, available from the start of November to end-June, will help exporters in these sectors cope with the severe competitio­n in internatio­nal markets. And, partly recover the unnecessar­y costs imposed on them by the new Goods and Services Tax regime.

Under the Services Exports from India Scheme, export of notified services that were already earning three per cent or five per cent duty credits will get their entitlemen­ts enhanced by two percentage points. This enhanced rate for these services will be available for export made in this financial year. The logic of acrossthe-board increase in entitlemen­ts is difficult to appreciate.

The new scheme of self-ratificati­on of input-output norms for AEO requires an exporter to give a chartered engineer’s certificat­e, based on which an advance authorisat­ion will be issued. Pre-import of inputs and their physical incorporat­ion in the export product have been prescribed as essential conditions. Wherever the value of by-products and recoverabl­e wastage generated during a manufactur­ing process is more than five per cent of the CIF value, the correspond­ing quantity of main input shall be reduced from the entitlemen­t, to the extent that the value of disallowed quantity is equal to the value of by-products and recoverabl­e wastage generated.

Records have to be maintained regarding consumptio­n of the inputs and the DGFT or any entity so authorised may conduct an audit. If the audit shows any wrong declaratio­n and/or instances in claiming of inputs not used in a manufactur­ing process or excess over what was consumed, demand and recovery actions will be initiated, beside action against the authorisat­ion holder, manufactur­er and chartered engineer. Detailed procedures under the scheme are yet to be issued. We have to wait and see how this welcome and trust-based system works.

The rest of what the ministry shows as FTP highlights are only narrations of what happened long before or of negligible impact.

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