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Last updated: 26 Sep, 2014  

The metal scrap importers have got one month’s breathing space to meet past commitments under the Public Notice issued on 28 April 2006. Bills of Lading issued till 1 August will be cleared by the customs on the basis of the previous system of certificate of “no explosive shells” from the approved pre-shipment inspection agencies. Once the transition period ends, the new registration procedure for foreign suppliers will be the only window open for the bills of lading issued after the cut of date of 1 August 2006. The last date for filing applications for registration of metal scrap suppliers in the foreign countries was extended by one month to 31 May 2006. The DGFT is accepting applications by email also to increase the system through put.

The trade is not too happy with the new supplier registration system since it works against the system of the market. Loose metal scrap is collected from diverse centres in the globe and delivered to the users in India located in distant places in a highly complex operation involving many financial, logistics and legal sub systems spread over many countries. However, in the supplier registration system, the supplier is fixed and so is the importer who can only be the actual user, that is, the final manufacturer. The system has no flexibility, the trader at the various points in the supply chain is not in the picture at all. The net result is high transaction cost to the final user which is ultimately born by the consumer in an already over heated industry.

Second hand capital goods: DGFT has cleared a major road block in the way of free import of second hand capital goods. It says that a declaration by the importer at the time of customs clearance to the effect that the goods are not remanufactured is adequate. This should get over the objections of the customs officers who are treating all second hand goods as remanufactured and asking the importer to get a license from the DGFT.

It may be recalled that in the recent Supplement to the Foreign Trade Policy, remanufactured goods, what ever that means, were put on the restricted category and the free treatment limited to second hand capital goods other than remanufactured goods.
It remains to be seen whether the customs officers follow the DGFT circular. They are likely to devise their own procedure for determining the lack of manufacture in the second hand goods. It is believed that the bulk of capital goods import into India in the second hand conditions since Indian industry can ill afford the high prices of the new machinery.

Used machinery may require some repairs from time to time but the cost of manufacture is far lower than comparative new machinery. The catch in the new FTP will trip many users and defeat the goal of promoting an open and free economy.

CD dumping investigation launched: The Moser Baer led eight party combine under the banner of Optical Disc Manufacturers Welfare Association petition of dumping CD-Rs was admitted for investigation by the designated authority on 4 April. The users of common CDs, known as CD-Rs in trade circles (WORM, Write Once Read Mostly), are condemned to a high price regime coupled with a grey market fed by smuggled CDs of dubious quality. The retail price of a CD-R in India is Rs 15, which is high compared to the Rs. 5 import price from Taiwan or China sources, according to DGCIS Kolkata figures, Hong Kong is even lower at just Rs 3.50 per piece.
The anti dumping investigation on imports will kill the Rs 120 crores official import market with the heavy impost and the current price of Rs. 15 will go up in the absence of import competition.

Normal value in the case of China is constructed from the international cost of production which is permissible on account of the non market status of China. In the other cases of imports from Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore, it is alleged that the domestic price is higher than the export price to India resulting in a positive dumping margin. (The US is outside the investigation process even as its export price at Rs. 7 per piece is comparable to Singapore). The total impact of the imports from the offending five, known as “cumulation” in anti dumping lingo, is alleged to have injured the members of the Moser Baer led association of eight. It seems that the injury parameter largely consists of potential losses of market share, profit and so on in the hypothetical event of the removal of the dumping companies from the scene. The injury investigations covers four years but dumping actions during the one year period ending 30 September 2005 will be considered.

Our own investigations show that the import market is doubling every year in terms of both quantity and value. India has given zero customs duty status to CD-Rs to promote the IT culture in the country to bring the industry into the main stream of the globalization currents. Imposition of the anti dumping duty on CDs will move us to the side current due to the erection of barriers in the working of the market. Low cost mass storage devices are key to IT operations. Today, a blank DVD which stores a huge 4.7 GB of data consisting of a full length movie is available in the market for just Rs 70. Distortions in the CD market will cripple the IT sector and reduce the trade gains envisaged in the zero duty IT regime. As it is, IT goods bear a crippling 16.32 percent and four percent countervailing duty which is an unfair imposition since there are no like goods manufactured in the country. The government may be well advised to launch a comparative cost audit to check why the members of the CD association are not able to produce at internationally competitive prices and reduce the burden of taxes and rigid laws on them.

Exporters wait: The FTP Supplement was released on 7 April. The demise of the DFRC to provide duty free to market related access to raw material took place in 1 May but the substitute Import Authorisation Scheme is still born. The customs notification and the export procedure nowhere in sight. The users of DFRC are waiting for the customs and DGFT notifications on the details. Apparently, the co-ordination between Finance and Commerce is not so good in spite of the announcement of the agreed FTP on 7 April.
 
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