Business Standard

AUTO FIRMS SOUND ALARM BELLS OVER IMPORT DISRUPTION­S

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER

The Indian automobile industry has sounded alarm bells over delays in Customs clearance for imports from China. The move, they said, would hurt the recovery of the industry, which has been reeling from the shock of a yearlong slowdown further worsened by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Amid heightened tensions along the Line of Actual Control with China, all shipments coming from China are being physically checked at ports and airports by Customs officials following a nationwide alert regarding enhanced risk weightage ascribed to consignmen­ts from that country. This is delaying shipments of crucial automobile components, said executives of auto players.

“Inordinate delays in clearance because of congestion­s at ports could eventually impact the manufactur­ing of vehicles in India. The industry is piecing itself together as growth is limping back; any further disruption at this juncture is best avoided,” said Rajan Wadhera, president, Society of Indian Automobile Manufactur­ers (SIAM).

Industry executives said while China-based manufactur­ers, such as MG Motors, have been affected the most, almost all automobile manufactur­ing process would slow down if 100 per cent manual checks of Chinese imports continued.

Over a quarter of India’s auto part imports — worth $4.2 billion — came from China in 2019, according to the data from Auto Component Manufactur­ers’ Associatio­n of India (ACMA). These included engine and transmissi­on parts.

Some of these components are critical and hard to source from elsewhere immediatel­y, said executives of global auto component manufactur­ers, such as Bosch Valeo and Minda Industries, which have set up shop in India because of the country’s large consumer base.

“Some of the items imported from China are critical components, such as parts of engines and electronic­s items, for which India is yet to develop domestic competence. The automotive value chain is a highly complex, integrated and interdepen­dent; non-availabili­ty of even a single component can, in fact, lead to stoppage of vehicle manufactur­ing lines. Post the lockdown, production in the component industry is gradually picking up in tandem with the growth in vehicles sales. It is, therefore, in the best interest of the industry and the economy that any further disruption­s are best avoided,” said Deepak Jain, president at ACMA

Though Customs officials told Business Standard that the move was based on specific intelligen­ce related to narcotics smuggling and illegal imports of undervalue­d items, industry saw it as a trade retaliator­y measure. The developmen­t coincided with the government making it mandatory for sellers to mention “country of origin” on products to be sold on the procuremen­t portal Government e-marketplac­e.

R C Bhargava, chairman of India’s largest auto firm Maruti Suzuki, said in order to reduce dependence on Chinese imports, it is necessary that Indian firms be much more competitiv­e, deeper and widespread. He warned that shunning products from China may lead to a price increase in the short run.

“Everybody knows that importing products over time actually becomes more and more expensive as the rupee gets weaker. So it is not really in anybody's commercial interest to continue to import; you import because you really have little choice in the matter," Bhargava added.

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 ??  ?? All shipments coming from China are being physically checked at ports and airports by Customs, delaying shipments of crucial automobile components
All shipments coming from China are being physically checked at ports and airports by Customs, delaying shipments of crucial automobile components

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