Hindustan Times (Delhi)

With eye on cheap imports, govt plans Customs Act tweak

- Utpal Bhaskar and Gireesh Chandra Prasad utpal.b@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: The government has proposed to amend the Customs Act to give it wide powers to ban imports and exports of goods that may hurt the local economy, clearing the way for it to bar imports of cheap toys and firecracke­rs from China.

So far, the government had powers to only ban imports and exports of gold and silver under the Customs Act, 1962.

THE GOVT’S PROPOSAL INCLUDES GIVING ITSELF THE POWERS TO BAN IMPORTS, EXPORTS OF GOODS THAT MAY HURT THE LOCAL ECONOMY

nNEW DELHI: The government has proposed to amend the Customs Act to give it wide powers to ban imports and exports of goods that may hurt the local economy, clearing the way for it to bar imports of cheap toys and firecracke­rs from China.

So far, the government had powers to only ban imports and exports of gold and silver under the Customs Act, 1962. Once approved, the amendment, through the Finance Bill, will expand the government’s power to ban imports or exports of all goods.

“This power will be exercised only in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces,” a government official said on condition of anonymity.

The measures are aimed at narrowing the trade deficit with China, which has flooded the Indian market with items such as toys, firecracke­rs and solar power equipment. The steps come amid a global rise in protection­ist policies to shield home-grown companies amid slowing economic growth.

The new powers to protect the economy may provide a lever to the government to foster consumptio­n of local products and boost manufactur­ing, said Abhishek Jain, tax partner at EY.

“On the practical side, the power may be exercised only in extreme situations,” Jain said.

The government also proposes to amend the Customs Tariff Act of 1975 to strengthen the mechanism to prevent dumping of cheap goods in the domestic market.

“Section 8B (of the Act) is being substitute­d with a new section to empower the Central government to apply safeguard measures, in case any article is imported into India in such increased quantities and under such conditions so as to cause or threatenin­g to cause serious injury to domestic industry,” according to government documents.

In May last year, India merged two separate bodies handling anti-dumping and import safeguards to form the Directorat­e General of Trade Remedies, similar to the US Internatio­nal Trade Commission, to create a trade defence mechanism that can respond to developmen­ts in a comprehens­ive and timely manner.

The government has recently initiated more than 130 antidumpin­g/countervai­ling duty/ safeguard cases to deal with rising incidence of unfair trade practices.

The domestic market for solar components, for instance, is dominated by Chinese companies due to their competitiv­e pricing.

The surge in imports led the Modi administra­tion in its previous term to impose a safeguard duty from July 30, 2018 on solar cells and modules imported from China and Malaysia. This will end in July this year.

The Union budget also approved an enabling mechanism to raise tariffs on imports of green energy equipment such as solar cells and modules.

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