Business Standard

Traders want CTT abolished in processed agro commoditie­s

- DILIP KUMAR JHA

The Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII) has urged the government to abolish the commodity transactio­n tax (CTT) in processed agri commoditie­s.

In a pre-Budget recommenda­tion submitted to the government, CII argued the levy of CTT on agri processed commoditie­s has created an anomaly because of tax exemptions granted to primary agri commoditie­s.

“The levy has drasticall­y reduced hedgers’ participat­ion in processed agri commoditie­s on account of increased impact cost. The domestic hedgers have moved to hedging on internatio­nal exchanges in commoditie­s such as soya oil and sugar,” said the CII recommenda­tion letter addressed to the Finance Minister Arun Jaitley.

The government exempted primary agri commoditie­s such as oilseeds, guar seed and levied 0.1 per cent of CTT on processed agri commoditie­s such as refined soya oil and sugar effective July 1, 2013. Since then, volume of trade on commodity futures exchanges has decline drasticall­y.

Traders’ body the Commodity Participan­ts Associatio­n of India (CPAI), however, has in its separate recommenda­tions requested the government to consider CTT component as advanced tax paid to the government.

“All duties and taxes paid for commodity futures trade were considered as advanced tax paid to the government until 2009. But then Finance Minister P Chidambara­m removed the clause in 2009. Since then, CTT paid to the government is considered as simple tax paid. Entire commodity trade would see a substantia­l boost in sentiment, if CTT is considered as advanced tax,” said Sanjay Rawal, President, CPAI.

The CII justified its demand for full exemption of CTT on processed agri commoditie­s as the levy directly impacted farmers and common people. An efficient hedging platform with minimum impact cost would help in establishi­ng a more stable price regime in these commoditie­s,” said CII in its presentati­on.

The industry body has also urged the government to exempt CTT on delivery based non-agri commodity derivative­s contracts. The body has recommende­d to facilitate trading on Saturdays and also extend trading time in agri commoditie­s till 8 pm every day to enable farmers to use futures platform after completion of the day’s work.

“We feel that if these suggestion­s can be considered and implemente­d, they would go a long way in helping our commoditie­s markets grow and become more vibrant and allow them to further benefit the entire commoditie­s value chain and its participan­ts, starting from the farmer as well as the economy of our country,” CII said.

Among other suggestion­s, the CII has highlighte­d a relaxation in daily price limit, relaxation­s in intra-day open interest violation penalties, raising hedger’s limit and widening position limit in near month contracts. CII has also urged the government to allow banks’ participat­ion in commodity futures trading, and permit cross product margin benefits within the same commodity complex. Reduction in staggered delivery period to 3-4 days from the 10 days was another demand.

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