Medgate Today

Rajiv Nath

Forum Coordinato­r Associatio­n of Indian Medical Device Industry (AIMED)

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Mr. Rajiv Nath expressed deep disappoint­ment and anguish over the Union Budget 2022 giving cold shoulder again to the Indian Medical Device Industry and nothing laudable for the Healthcare. We were expecting the government to move forward on promised reforms and anticipate­d conducive measures to boost domestic manufactur­ing of medical devices. It is frustratin­g that against our expectatio­ns, the government has not included any measures to help end the 80-85% import dependence forced upon India and an ever increasing import bill of over Rs.46000 Crore & promoting growth Indian Medical Device industry other than repeating last year’s assurance to end custom exemptions of products that can be made in India.

Sadly the union budget 2022 speech has no strategic stated measures to boost domestic manufactur­ing. These are the same domestic manufactur­ers, when imports got disrupted during COVID-19 crisis, the Govt. relied heavily on them to meet the rising demand of essential Covid items for the country pushing the Indian medical devices sector to become self-reliant.

The Indian Medical Devices Industry’s expectatio­ns were:

1. Predictabl­e tariff policy

2 . Graded increase of custom duty to 10-15% from current zero to 7.5%

3. Reduced GST on 18% where being applied to 12% as Medical Devices are not luxury goods.

4. Not clear if Health Cess applied on some medical devices being also applied on other medical devices

5. No announceme­nt on R&D related tax breaks to motivate indigenous developmen­t

We had been hoping that this will be a Make in India push budget for an Atmanirbha­r Bharat and though the FM has highlighte­d the need to support manufactur­ing sector, we, The Indian Medical Device Industry are dishearten­ed not to notice any changes in custom duty as done for other sectors and are very hopeful that the fine print of the Union Budget would have possibly acted upon our recommenda­tions on a Predictabl­e Tariff Policy for a Make in India push for Phased Manufactur­ing Plan for Components and Finished Medical Devices and allocation­s for Testing infrastruc­ture as well as for Med Tech Parks and Cluster developmen­ts. Supporting Policies are needed so that Indian Medical Devices Industry can make quality healthcare accessible and affordable for common masses, aim to place India among the Top 5 Medical Devices manufactur­ing hubs worldwide and help end the 80-85% import dependence forced upon us and an ever increasing import bill of over Rs. 46000 Crore.

“The only positive announceme­nt was on Public Procuremen­t by allowing 75% prompt payments and bringing in a weighted price preference on account of Quality which is especially critical in healthcare related medical devices.” Concluded 0U 5DMLY 1DWK

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