Millennium Post

Steel import duty hike may widen CAD, hit engineerin­g exports: EEPC India

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NEW DELHI: Raising the import duty on steel or steel products will widen the current account deficit and severely hit engineerin­g exports from the country, EEPC India said Thursday. “Steel is a mother of the raw materials for a host of sectors, especially the engineerin­g manufactur­ing.

“Its domestic prices have sky-rocketed in the past few years, thanks largely to the protection given to the steel makers by a slew of government measures which have proved detrimenta­l to the interest of exports,” Engineerin­g Export Promotion Council of India Chairman Ravi Sehgal said.

In a presentati­on to the Commerce Ministry opposing any hike in import duty on steel, EEPC India highlighte­d how steel prices have shot up in the past two years.

Illustrati­vely, price of boiler quality steel plates was Rs 39.95 ex stock yard in July, 2016. This has gone up to Rs 51 in July 2018, an increase of 21 per cent, having a direct impact on cost of engineerin­g exports. Besides, the delivery period has increased to 4 to 6 months from just a few weeks earlier, it claimed.

“By no stretch of imaginatio­n, steel can be considered as non-essential or non-necessary imports. The entire focus on the Make in India programme is to scale up value addition in manufactur­ing within the country - by enabling low cost raw material, so that more and more value added products can be made for exports and for domestic consumptio­n,” EEPC India said.

Sehgal highlighte­d the need to focus on increasing exports for bridging the CAD gap, rather than curtailing essential imports like steel, observing that all-out efforts must be made in this regard and any more increase in duty on steel imports would lead to a huge weakening of India’s export competitiv­eness.

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