Highlights Of Foreign Trade Policy, 2021-2026
Foreign Trade
Policy 2021-2026: Expectations For The Import-Export Sector
On April 1, India was to unveil the
Foreign Trade Policy 2021-2026. The existing policy was extended by a year due
to Covid-19, which was to end on March 31. And the government decided to
further extend it for 6 more months. The current policy will now be valid upto
September 30. The foreign trade policy (FTP) outlines government strategies and
steps to promote domestic production and exports with the objective of driving
economic growth.
Import and Export
Agent in Delhi observes that it still remains to be seen how the new policy gets
affected after India battles the second wave of the pandemic. The new policy is
eagerly awaited as the economy continues to reel from the effects of the
pandemic and disruptions to international trade caused by lockdowns and
restrictions worldwide. The UN World Economic Situation and Prospects 2021
report says India’s economy shrank 9.6% in 2020 against a global average of
4.3%. It projects a 7.3% growth for India in 2021. Hopes for a turnaround rest
largely on exports picking up. Exporters expect the new policy to include
initiatives aimed at improving India’s standing in global merchandise and
services exports and to correct the deficiencies of Foreign Trade Policy
2015-2020.
What is India’s Foreign Trade Policy?
The foreign trade policy is
essentially a set of guidelines for the import and export of goods and
services. These are established by the Directorate General of Foreign Trade
(DGFT), the governing body for the promotion and facilitation of exports and
imports under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. The policy is notified for
a period of five years. It is updated every year on March 31, and the changes
come into effect from April 1.
While the trade policy covers both imports and exports,
its primary objective is to facilitate trade by reducing transaction cost and
time, thereby making Indian exports more globally competitive. It aims to:
- Accelerate economic activity and make the most of
global market opportunities
- Encourage sustained economic growth by providing
access to raw materials, components, intermediates (goods used as inputs
for the production of other goods), consumables and capital goods required
for production
- Strengthen Indian agriculture, industry and
services
- Generate employment
- Encourage stakeholders to strive for international
standards of quality
- Provide quality consumer products at reasonable
prices
FTP 2015-2020 – Highs and Lows
The current trade policy – which focused on improving
India’s performance in existing markets/products and exploring new
markets/products – has been praised as “progressive” for the following
reasons:
- It
consolidated a range of export incentives with different eligibility
criteria into two schemes – the Merchandise Exports from India Scheme
(MEIS) and Services Exports from India Scheme (SEIS).
- It offered
export incentives under these two schemes in the form of duty credit
scrips, which can be used by exporters to pay import duties. The scrips
are fully transferable, which means that if an exporter has no need for
them, they can pass it on to another.
- It reduced
export obligation from 90% to 75% for capital goods sourced from local
manufacturers under the Export Promotion Capital Goods Scheme (EPCG).
- It allowed
manufacturers who are “status holders” (entrepreneurs certified by the
DGFT as having helped India become a major export player) to self-certify
their manufactured goods as originating from India. This helps them
qualify for preferential treatment under various bilateral and regional
trade agreements.
- It
identified 108 micro, small and medium enterprise (MSME) clusters for
focused interventions with a view to boost exports.
- It
promoted paperless processing of various DGFT licences and
applications.
What are the expectations from FTP
2021-2026?
Covid-19 was
catastrophic for international trade. Indian exports fell by a record 60% and
imports by 59% in April 2020. Though the situation has improved, the road to
recovery is long and hard. That is why the new trade policy must deliver the
goods. Based on inputs from traders, trade associations, members of Parliament
and a government-appointed high-level advisory group, some key expectations
are:
- WTO-compliant
tax incentives: With incentives under MEIS and SEIS under a cloud,
the need of the hour is WTO-compliant tax benefits. To this end, the
government has announced the Remission of Duties or Taxes on Export
Products (RoDTEP) scheme, effective January 1, 2021. It replaces MEIS.
Rates and conditions for the new scheme are yet to be announced.
- Easy
credit access: A long-standing demand of exporters, especially
MSMEs, is credit access. Formal financial institutions such as banks are
reluctant to lend to MSMEs due to their lack of adequate collateral. The
policy can help open up alternate credit avenues, such as finance
technology start-ups. The advisory group suggests raising borrowing limits
at the Export Import Bank of India.
- Infrastructure
upgrade: One reason why China is a manufacturing and export
powerhouse is its network of ports, highways and high-speed trains, which
are among the best in the world. India needs to learn from its neighbour
and improve its flagging infrastructure by upgrading existing ports,
warehouses, quality testing and certification centres and building new
ones. The Trade Infrastructure for Export Sector, a scheme for developing
infrastructure to promote exports, was launched in 2017 for a period of
three years. Many in the industry hope it will be
extended.
- Less
subsidy, more support: In 2020, Commerce Minister Piyush
Goyal said quality, technology and scale of production were the answers to
India’s global ambitions, not subsidies. Many in the industry agree,
saying government support in the form of skill development programmes and
technological upgradation rather than subsidies would help them become
more competitive. Pharmaceuticals, biotechnology and medical devices are
some sectors that could do with upskilling.
- Tax
breaks: If India were to do away with subsidies, exporters
would still need some form of government support. Easier and lower taxes
are a way of filling this gap. The reduction of corporate tax rates and
simplification of duty structures are long-standing demands. The Confederation
of Indian Industry suggests simplifying the import duty structure by
following “the general principle of higher duties on finished goods and
lower/minimal duties on intermediates and raw material”. There are also
demands for an overhaul/improvement of existing schemes such as the EPCG
and Duty Drawback Scheme.
- Digitisation
and e-commerce: With Covid-19 disrupting traditional supply chains,
India needs modern trade practices. Digitisation and e-commerce are two
ways to go about this. Digitisation can start with making common
import-export processes paperless. Trade body Nasscom, for example,
recommends an online mechanism for Importer Exporter Code (IEC) holders to
change their particulars (mobile numbers, e-mail IDs, etc).
- Export
awareness: At times, Indian exporters are defeated not by a
lack of trade opportunities but by lack of awareness of the same. The
trade policy can make a provision for government workshops and awareness
programmes that educate and inform traders about international laws and
standards, global markets, intellectual property rights, patents and
geographical indication (GI).
- Import
wishlist: While most of the expectations might be geared
towards exports, India’s import community has its wishlist too, which
includes permission to import capital goods on self-certification basis
and to import prohibited items with the approval of the Central
government-approved Board of Approval or Inter-Ministerial Standing
Committee.
Road to $5 trillion by 2025
India aspires to be a
$5-trillion economy by 2025. To achieve this dream, it needs to:
- Register a
GDP growth rate of 8% or more in the next few years
- Triple its
exports to $1 trillion by 2025
This is a tough task, considering Indian exports have
hovered around the $300-billion mark since 2011-2012. Battered by the
pandemic, exports for the April-November 2020 period stood at $304.25 billion.
The country’s GDP reached $ 2.88 trillion in 2019–2020. In its 2019 report on
what India must do for exports to reach $1 trillion by 2025.
The government, on its part, seems committed to seriously
working towards its $5-trillion dream.
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