Millennium Post (Kolkata)

Excise duty cut will help reduce logistics cost and promote exports, say exporters

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NEW DELHI: Excise duty cut on petrol and diesel and rationalis­ation of customs duties on goods such as raw material for plastic and steel will help reduce logistics cost, promote competitiv­eness of manufactur­ing and exports of value-added goods, exporters said on Sunday.

The govt on Saturday announced reduction in excise duty on petrol by a record Rs 8 per litre and that on diesel by Rs 6 per litre. It also cut import duty on raw material of steel and plastic and increased export duty on iron ore and steel intermedia­tes.

Federation of Indian Export Organisati­ons (FIEO) President A Sakthivel said these measures will bring down the domestic prices of key inputs thereby softening inflation.

“This will also add to the competitiv­eness of the manufactur­ing and export sector and will further push valueadded exports from the country. These proactive measures will also ease the logistics pressure and bring down the freight bill of the country as in some cases the same raw material was being exported from the country and subsequent­ly being imported by the downstream users,” he said.

Sharing similar views, leading Mumbai-based exporter and Chairman of Technocraf­t Industries, Sharad Kumar Saraf said reduction in excise duty on petrol and diesel will reduce logistics costs and will support exports particular­ly of commoditie­s which are freight sensitive.

“Export duty on iron ore and semi finished steel products like HR coils and bars already has a desired effect. Steel prices have started softening and this will have a significan­t positive impact on our engineerin­g exports . The government must be compliment­ed for such actions,” Saraf said. Ludhianaba­sed Hand Tools Associatio­n President S C Ralhan too said the iron and steel industry should pass on the benefits to the engineerin­g sector, particular­ly the MSME units, which are reeling under the impact of high iron and steel prices.

Plastics Export Promotion Council Chairman Arvind Goenka said it is a welcome move that will help the plastic processors be more competitiv­e in the domestic market for sure.

“India’s polymer production is much lower than consumptio­n leading to polymer imports worth $15 billion in FY 2021. Polymer consumptio­n is growing at a faster rate than the country’s GDP and India needs several new petrochemi­cal complexes to achieve atma nirbharta but what is important is that the proposed reduction in custom duty should not dissuade polymer producers from expanding capacity,” he said.PTI

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