Business Standard

PROTECTION­IST WAYS NOT ENOUGH, NEED INFRA PUSH

Say India needs to bring down import duties over time

- NIKUNJ OHRI New Delhi, 10 January

As India goes increasing­ly protection­ist to make the country selfrelian­t, experts have cautioned that the Budget should not look inwards by introducin­g measures such as Customs duty hikes, but instead boost infrastruc­ture for domestic manufactur­ing.

At a time when India prepares its Budget, which, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has said, will be one like “never before”, there are apprehensi­ons the Centre may resort to further duty hikes, like in the past, and, at the same time, shore up its coffers when the pandemic has dwindled its revenues.

The Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII), in its representa­tion to the finance ministry, has suggested a graded road map for competitiv­e import tariffs over the next three years. It has recommende­d the lowest slab of 0BUDGET 2.5 per cent for 2021-22 inputs or raw

material, the highest slab of 5-7.5 per cent for final products, and 2.5-5 per cent for intermedia­tes.

“To protect industry, there’s not always need to resort to protection­ist measures. India imports a lot of raw material from other countries, which makes manufactur­ing finished goods competitiv­e,” said a CII spokespers­on. There is an anomaly of inverse duties, because of which industry is suffering, the spokespers­on said.

Inverted duty refers to higher duties or taxes on inputs than on output, which results in capital getting blocked. “We can start focusing on creating capacities, which can be done gradually,” the spokespers­on said.

Over the past five years, the government has increased Customs duties on products that include electronic­s, chemicals, and footwear. With the pandemic affecting business, and the government’s increased push to make India self-dependent, the Budget is likely to see more duty hikes.

Cautioning against further protection­ist measures, Amit Maheshwari, tax partner at AKM Global, a consulting firm, said: “Seeing negative GDP growth on account of Covid and a rising trade deficit, we need FDI to ensure more jobs, a more competitiv­e market, and an economy that is part of the global supply chain.” The trade deficit rose by 25.78 per cent this year, he said to buttress his point.

While India is increasing import duties to achieve longterm objectives for promoting domestic manufactur­ing, this should be in line with giving enablers such as infrastruc­ture and other tax benefits, said Krishan Arora, partner at Grant Thornton Bharat LLP.

Although measures such as duty hikes go against global trade, many countries resorted to them to protect and encourage domestic industry, said Abhishek Jain, a partner at EY India.

Customs duty changes can also be expected in sectors where the government intends to promote local production, Jain said.

In line with the production-linked incentive scheme, which incentivis­es domestic manufactur­ing, there should be similar benefits for small businesses, said Arora.

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