Hindustan Times (East UP)

Govt, Tesla in ‘weird stalemate’ on tax with no investment pledge

- Feedback@livemint.com AFP

NEW DELHI: Talks between India and Tesla Inc over potential tax benefits are deadlocked as the government is not keen to give the firm any breaks without a commitment to manufactur­e locally, people familiar with the discussion­s told Reuters.

Tesla is desperate to import and sell its electric vehicles in India and has for nearly a year lobbied officials in New Delhi to reduce tariffs, which the company’s billionair­e CEO Elon Musk says are among the highest in the world.

But Indian official sources said they have been unconvince­d by Tesla’s lobbying as the company has not yet shared any firm plan to invest in the country, something that would be in line with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s “Make in India” vision to boost local manufactur­ing and create jobs.

A third person with direct knowledge of Tesla’s thinking said the discussion­s with the Indian government have reached a “weird stalemate situation”. “Things are not moving ahead (for Tesla),” said the person. The sources declined to be identified as the discussion­s are private. The apparent deadlock could upset the electric carmaker’s ambitions for the South Asian country as it was pinning hopes on lower import taxes to make its cars more affordable and the business viable.

Currently, India levies an import tax of as high as 100% on electric vehicles which have a so-called landing cost -- a car’s price plus inbound shipping charges -- of $40,000 or more.

This would make India the most expensive market for Tesla cars in the world, putting them well out of reach for most Indian consumers. The third source said Tesla has told officials it is open to sourcing more auto components locally and eventually moving towards manufactur­ing, but the government sources have indicated they want firm commitment­s. “If they do not want to invest anything here, how is that model going to work,” said one senior Indian government official, who added that a cut in the import duty was “highly unlikely” anytime soon.

Tesla did not respond to a request for comment.

Modi’s office and India’s ministries of finance and industries, which are all reviewing Tesla’s demands, did not respond to a request for comment.

Tesla, though, has pinned its hopes on the upcoming federal budget on February 1 - when such tax changes are typically announced - to see if its lobbying yields any result, or then rethink how it wants to approach the Indian market, the third source and a fourth person aware of the company’s plans said.

 ?? ?? Tesla has for nearly a year lobbied officials in New Delhi to reduce tariffs.
Tesla has for nearly a year lobbied officials in New Delhi to reduce tariffs.

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