Procedure for Supply of Duty Free Gold to
Jewellery Exporters by Nominated Agencies
·
No Coins
Allowed
·
Norms for 20/80
Export Obligation Specified
[CBEC Circular
No. 34 dated 4th September 2013]
Sub: Import of
Gold and Gold Dore Bars- Procedure and Guidelines.
Reference is
invited to Board's Circular No. 28/2009 dated 14.10.2009 regarding procedure to
be followed by the Nominated Agencies for supplying duty free gold to
exporters. RBI has now issued fresh guidelines for import of gold and gold dore
bars vide circular RBI/2013-14/187, AP (DIR Series) Circular No. 25 dated
14.8.2013, as revised (copy enclosed). In order to operationalize the same, the
following procedure shall be followed for import of gold. This circular shall
supersede the customs circular no. 28/2009-Cus dated 14.10.2009 insofar as the
import of gold is concerned. The import of silver and platinum shall continue
to be governed by the customs circular dated 14.10.2009.
2. Henceforth, gold shall be permitted to be
imported only by the agencies notified by DGFT, which as of now are as follows:
i. Metals and
Minerals Trading Corporation limited (MMTC);
ii. Handicraft and
Handloom Export Corporation (HHEC);
iii.
State Trading Corporation (STC);
iv.
Project and Equipment Corporation of India
Ltd. (PEC);
v. STCL Ltd;
vi.
MSTC Ltd;
vii.
Diamond India Limited (DIL);
viii.
Gems & Jewellery Export Promotion
Council (G&J EPC);
ix.
A Star Trading House (only for Gems &
Jewellery sector) or a Premier Trading House under paragraph 3.10.2 of Foreign
Trade Policy; and
x. Any other
agency authorized by Reserve Bank of India (RBI).
3. Import of gold
by the banks/agencies/entities specified in para 2 above, henceforth referred
to as Nominated Agencies for the purpose of this Circular, shall be subject to
the following:
a.
Import of gold in the form of coins and
medallions is prohibited.
b.
It shall be incumbent on the nominated
banks/agencies/entities to ensure that at least one fifth, i.e., 20%, of every lot of import of gold
imported to the country is exclusively made available for the purpose of
exports and the balance for domestic use. A working example of the operations
of the 20/80 scheme is given in the Annexure to the RBI Circular dated
14.8.2013, as revised.
c.
Entities/units in the SEZ and EOUs,
Premier and Star Trading Houses shall be permitted to import gold exclusively
for the purpose of exports only and these entities shall not be permitted to
clear imported gold for any purpose other than for exports (irrespective of
whether they are nominated agencies or not).
d.
Gold made
available by a nominated agency to units in the SEZ and EoUs, Premier and Star
Trading Houses shall not qualify as supply of gold to the exporters, for the
purpose of the 20/80 Scheme;
e.
Gold imported against any authorization
such as Advance Authorization/Duty Free Import Authorization (DFIA) shall be
utilized for export purposes only and no diversion for domestic use shall be
permitted.
4. For import of gold, following procedure
is prescribed:
i. all imports shall be routed
through customs bonded warehouses only;
ii. jurisdictional
Commissioner may permit the vaults of the nominated agencies as customs bonded
warehouse subject to the procedure prescribed under Section 58 of the Custom
Act;
iii.
for every consignment of gold imported, at
least 20% quantity shall be for supply
to the exporters only and remaining can be cleared on payment of duty in
accordance with RBI circular dated 14.8.2013, as revised;
iv.
the Nominated Agencies shall furnish a
bond to the satisfaction of the said officer undertaking to properly account
for the warehoused gold and also to discharge the duty liability at the prescribed
effective rate of duty;
v. the Nominated
Agencies may be permitted by the jurisdictional Commissioner of Customs to give
a general bond for an estimated amount of duty worked out at the effective rate
involved in their monthly import or a revolving bond starting with a bond equal
to the duty estimated at the effective rate on quantity of gold likely to be
imported in a month;
vi.
the Nominated Agencies (other than
designated banks nominated by RBI and public sector undertakings) shall also
furnish a bank guarantee equal to 25% of the estimated amount of duty involved
on import of gold in a month or the bonds executed by them. The exemption from
bank guarantee to the designated banks nominated by RBI and public sector
undertakings shall be permissible subject to the following conditions:
a. the said entity
has not defaulted in following the procedure and condition specified by Customs
and/or DGFT;
b. in case of
default in export of jewellery manufactured out of precious metal supplied by
nominated agency within the prescribed period, the said entity has not
defaulted in payment of duty within the specified period;
c. the said entity
has not been served with a show cause notice or no demand confirmed against it,
during the preceding 3 years, for violations involving fraud or collusion or
any willful misstatement or suppression of facts under relevant provisions of
the Customs Act 1962, the Central Excise Act 1944, the Finance Act 1994
covering Service Tax, the Prevention of Money Laundering Act 2002, the Foreign
Trade (Development & Regulation) Act 1992, the Foreign Exchange Management
Act 1999 and the Rules made thereunder;
vii. the
Commissioner of Customs may allow more than one Nominated Agencies to keep
their imported goods in the same bonded warehouse provided the quantities are
kept segregated and separate accounts are maintained;
viii. the Nominated
Agencies shall be exempt from following the double lock system. Physical
presence of the Bond Officer will not be required for bonding or ex-bonding the
goods. No cost recovery charges would be payable by the Nominated Agencies;
ix.
the Nominated Agencies can be visited by Custom
officers for surprise audit or checks. The jurisdictional Commissioner should
devise a system of random audit at least once in 3 months during the first year
and twice in a year subsequently;
x. the Nominated
Agencies, intending to clear gold to an exporter, shall file an ex-bond Bill of
entry, clearly stating the name, address and details of owners/promoters/Managing Director/Partners
etc of the exporter to whom the gold is being sold, with the jurisdictional
customs officer where the gold has been bonded. The Nominated Agencies shall
clear gold for domestic use on payment of duty by filing appropriate ex-bond
Bill of Entry.
xi.
the exporters intending to receive precious
metal from the Nominated Agencies will register themselves with their
jurisdictional Deputy/ Assistant Commissioners who will issue them a one-time
Certificate specifying therein the details of their units such as name and
address of the unit and the owners/promoters/Managing Director/Partners etc. of
the organization. Exporters already registered with the customs authorities
under the provisions of circular 28/2009-Cus dated 14.10.2009 need not take a
fresh registration under this circular. This certificate has to be produced to
the Nominated Agencies while taking gold. The units shall submit an undertaking
to the Deputy/ Assistant Commissioner without bank guarantee to follow the
conditions of notification under which they are receiving duty free gold and
export the jewellery made therefrom within the period stipulated in the Foreign
Trade Policy. The same procedure will be followed by the EOU/SEZ units
intending to receive gold from nominated agencies;
xii. the customs
officer shall permit clearance of the gold for export production under the
relevant exemption notification after submission of the documents stated above
and shall make necessary entries in the Register in the form prescribed in
Annexure-I. This register shall be maintained by the customs officer separately
for each of the nominated agency importing gold under his/her jurisdiction;
xiii. the Nominated
Agencies shall also maintain an account of the goods released to the exporters
(exporter-wise) on day-to-day basis. This account shall be liable for
inspection by any Customs authority as the account of a bonded warehouse;
xiv. proof of export
by the exporter shall be furnished in accordance with para 4A.8(a) of HBP V.1,
to the nominated agencies as a proof of having exported the jewellery made from
the duty free gold released to them within the period prescribed in the Foreign
Trade Policy. The Nominated Agency shall furnish a self-certified copy of the
same to the customs officer where the gold was bonded;
xv. wherever such
proof of export is not produced within the period prescribed in the Foreign
Trade Policy, the Nominated Agency shall (without waiting for its recovery from
the exporter) deposit the amount of duty calculated at the effective rate
leviable on the quantity of precious metal not exported, within 7 days of
expiry of the period within which the jewellery manufactured out of the said
quantity of gold was supposed to be exported. The Nominated Agencies will
settle their claim with the exporter at their own level. The Nominated Agencies
shall also report the cases of failure to export the jewellery made out of gold
released to the exporter, to the Commissioner of Customs in whose jurisdiction
the gold was originally warehoused;
xvi. the customs
officer shall ensure that all clearances of gold from the customs bonded
warehouse are in accordance with the RBI circular, especially that the quantity
of gold imported by the Nominated Agency, in the third consignment onwards from
the date of notification of the RBI Circular dated 14.08.2013, as revised, does
not exceed five times the quantity of gold contained in the exported products
for which proof of export and realization of payments related thereto, has been
submitted to the customs officer;
xvii. the
reconciliation of exports and calculation of quantities for subsequent imports
shall be done nominated agency-wise and port-wise by the jurisdictional customs
officer.
5. For the
import of gold dore bars, the following procedure is prescribed:
i.
import of gold dore bars shall be
permitted only against a license issued by the DGFT;
ii.
the entity to whom the license has been
issued by DGFT, hereinafter referred to as the license-holder, shall be
permitted to import gold dore bars subject to the conditions laid down in
notification 12/2012-Cus dated 17.3.2012 as amended;
iii.
the customs officer at the port from where
gold dore bars are imported shall ensure that the quantity of gold imported by
the license-holder, in the third consignment onwards from the date of
notification of the RBI Circular dated 14.08.2013 as revised, does not exceed
five times the quantity of gold contained in the exported products for which
proof of export in accordance with Para 4A.8 (a) of HBP Volume 1 has been
submitted to the customs officer;
iv.
the customs officer at the port from where
gold dore bars are imported shall maintain a license-holder wise record of the
gold imported as per Register prescribed in Annexure-II. He/she shall also
maintain a record of proof of export of the goods manufactured out of gold
supplied by the license-holder to exporters from the refined gold. The proof of
export, duly certified by the central excise officer in whose jurisdiction the
refinery is registered, shall be submitted to the customs officer by the
license holder.
v.
the license holder shall ensure that at
least 20% of the gold manufactured out of each consignment of gold dore bars is
supplied to the exporters and the remaining is supplied for domestic use in
accordance with the RBI circular dated 14.8.2013, as revised;
vi.
entities/ units in the SEZ and EOUs,
Premier and Star Trading Houses shall be permitted to procure gold from the
refinery of the license holder exclusively for the purpose of exports only and
these entities shall not be permitted to clear such gold for any purpose other
than for exports (irrespective of whether they are nominated agencies or not).
Further, gold made available by such
refineries to units in the SEZ and EoUs, Premier and Star trading houses shall
not qualify as supply of gold to the exporters, for the purpose of the 20/80
Scheme;
vii.
the central excise officer, in whose
jurisdiction the refinery is registered, shall monitor that at least 20%
quantity of refined gold shall be for the supply to the exporters only and
remaining can be cleared in accordance with the RBI circular dated 14.8.2013,
as revised;
viii.
for each consignment of gold dore bars
imported, the license holder shall submit a report on utilization of gold dore
bars, gold produced after refining, gold issued to exporters and the proof of
export for the goods manufactured and exported by these exporters to the
central excise officer under whose jurisdiction the refinery of the license
holder is registered. A copy of the same, duly authenticated by the central
excise officer, shall be submitted to the customs officer under whose
jurisdiction the consignment was initially imported.
6. This Circular
shall be deemed to be modified as and when, and in the manner RBI issues any
circular to amend the policy related to import of gold as contained in their
circular dated 14.08.2013 as revised.
7. Wide
publicity may be given to these instructions by way of issuance of Public/Trade
Notice. Difficulties, if any, in implementation of these instructions, may be
brought to the notice of the Directorate General of Export Promotion.
Annexure-I
Register to be
maintained by the customs officer in terms of Para 4 (X)
1. Name of the
Nominated Agency:
2. Full Address:
3. Bond No. &
Date:
4. Amount of
Bond:
5. Type of Bond
(Running/Revolving/Consignment-wise):
6. Accepted by:
|
Receipts |
|||||||
|
Date |
Date of Import |
B/ E No. & Date |
Date of warehousing |
Quantity of Gold warehoused |
Value of, and duty involved in the
gold warehoused |
Signature of the authorized
representative of the Nominated Agency |
Signature of the Customs officer |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
|
|
Quantity permitted to be imported in terms of
RBI Circular |
|||||||
|
B/E number and Date |
Quantity imported |
Quantity warehoused |
Quantity cleared on payment of duty |
Quantity supplied to EOUs/SEZ units, Premier and
Star trading houses |
Quantity supplied to exporters (other than those in column 5) |
Quantity for which proof of export has been
received till the date of next import of gold from quantity supplied in
column 6 |
Quantity permitted to be imported |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
Annexure-II
Register to be
maintained by the customs officer in terms of Para 5 (v)
1. Name of the
License holder:
2. Full Address:
3. Name and
address of the central excise office where the refining unit is registered:
Receipts
|
Date |
Date of Import |
B/ E No. & Date |
Quantity of Gold dore imported |
% purity of gold as indicated in the
assay report |
Estimated quantity of pure gold |
Signature of the Customs officer |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
Quantity permitted to be imported in terms of RBI
Circular
|
B/E number and Date |
Quantity of pure gold estimated in gold dore bars
imported |
Quantity of pure gold obtained after refining |
Quantity cleared on payment of duty |
Quantity supplied to EOUs/SEZ units, Premier and
Star trading houses |
Quantity supplied to exporters (other than those in column 5) |
Quantity for which proof of export has been
received till the date of next import of gold from quantity supplied in
column 6 |
Quantity permitted to be imported |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
Import of Gold by Nominated Banks /Agencies/Entities (Revised)
[Ref: RBI Circular No. 25 dated 14th August 2013]
Attention of Authorised Persons is drawn to the Reserve Bank’s A.P.
(DIR Series) Circular No. 15 dated July 22, 2013 on the captioned subject. As per these
instructions, certain restrictions were imposed on the import of various forms
of gold by nominated banks/nominated agencies/ premier or star trading
houses/SEZ units/EoUs which have been permitted to import gold for use in the
domestic sector.
2. Government of India
and the Reserve Bank of India have been receiving several requests for
clarifications on the operational aspects of the scheme of imports put in place
in terms of the above circular. There have also been representations to change
certain aspects of the scheme. Taking into account all these representations
and in consultation with the Government of India, it has been decided to issue
the following clarifications/modifications in supersession of all the earlier
instructions:
a.
Import of gold in the form of coins and
medallions is now prohibited.
b.
It shall be incumbent on all nominated
banks/nominated agencies and other entities to ensure that at least one fifth,
i.e., 20%, of every lot of import of gold imported to the country is
exclusively made available for the purpose of exports and the balance for
domestic use. A working example of the operations of the 20/80 scheme envisaged
in terms of the present instructions is given in the Annex. This shall be monitored by customs authorities, and will be
implemented port-wise only.
c.
Further, nominated banks/ nominated
agencies and other entities shall make available gold for domestic use only to
the entities engaged in jewellery business/bullion dealers and to banks
authorised to administer the Gold Deposit Scheme against full upfront payment.
In other words, supply of gold in any form to the domestic users other than
against full payment upfront shall not be permitted.
d.
The nominated banks/agencies/refineries
and other entities shall ensure that there is no front loading of imports,
particularly in the first and second lots of imports. Such imports shall be
linked to normal quantities of gold supplied to the exporters by the nominated
banks/agencies and shall not exceed the highest quantity supplied during any
one year out of last three years. The quantity thus arrived at, however, will
not be imported in one or two lots only. As a thumb rule, imports of more than
maximum of two months of requirements of the exporters in a lot would be
considered unusual. Illustratively, if the gold supplied to exporters by a bank
during the last three years is say, 30 tonnes, 40 tonnes and 60 tonnes
respectively, imports in terms of this circular shall be based on highest of
three i.e. 60 tonnes. Further, import of 50 tonnes( two months export of 10
tonnes for exports and 4 times the amount for domestic use, totalling 50
tonnes) will be considered unusual. In case of nominated banks not having a
previous record of having supplied gold to the exporters they would need to
seek prior approval from RBI before placing orders for import of gold for the
first lot under the 20/80 scheme.
e.
The 20/80 principle would also apply
for the henceforth import of gold in any form/purity including gold dore,
whereby 20 per cent of the gold imported shall be provided to the exporters.
This will be administered and monitored at the refinery level for each
consignment at the time of such imports. This will also be monitored by the
customs authorities. The refinery shall make available for domestic use only to
the entities engaged in jewellery business/bullion dealers and to the banks
authorised to administer the Gold Deposit Scheme against full upfront payment
and sale of gold against any other form of payment shall not be permitted.
Further, the import of gold dore is permitted only against a licence issued by
DGFT.
(Note: Gold made available by a nominated agency to units in
the SEZ and EoUs, Premier and Star trading houses shall not qualify as supply
of gold to the exporters, for the purpose of this Scheme)
f.
Any authorisation such as Advance
Authorisation/Duty Free Import Authorization (DFIA) is to be utilised for
import of gold meant for export purposes only and no diversion for domestic use
shall be permitted.
3. Not withstanding any of the foregoing directions, entities/units in the SEZ and EoUs, Premier and Star trading
houses (irrespective of whether they are nominated agencies or not) are
permitted to import gold exclusively for the purpose of exports only.
4. AD Category I banks
are advised to strictly ensure that foreign exchange transactions effected by /
for their constituents are compliant with the above instructions. Head Offices
of nominated agencies / International Banking Divisions of banks would be
responsible for monitoring operations of the revised scheme taking into account
transactions put through different centres. In respect of gold released for the
purpose of exports, AD Category I banks will also put in place a special
mechanism to monitor realization of export proceeds as per the extant
regulations and any contraventions/ unusual developments in this regard should
be reported forthwith to the concerned Regional Office of the Reserve Bank of
India.
5. Government of India
will be issuing separate instructions, if any, to the customs authorities/DGFT
to operationalise and monitor the above requirements for import of gold.
6. The above
instructions will come into force with immediate effect. Authorised dealers may
please bring the contents of this circular to the notice of their constituents
and customers concerned.
7. The directions
contained in this circular have been issued under Section 10(4) and Section
11(1) of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999 (42 of 1999), and are
without prejudice to permissions / approvals, if any, required under any other
law.
Working example of the operations of 20/80 scheme for import of
gold
1. A nominated
bank/agency/ any other entity ABC imports say 100 kg of gold, which shall be
routed through custom bonded warehouses only. If considered necessary, the lot
can be procured through two invoices – one for exporters (i.e.20%) and the
other one for domestic users (80%).
2. Out of the above
import of 100 kg, 20 kg gold held in the bonded warehouse can be got released
in part or full to be made available to the exporters of gold against
undertaking to customs authorities as is the practice now.
3. The balance 80 kg
can be supplied in part or full to domestic entities engaged in jewellery
business/bullion traders/banks operating the Gold Deposit Scheme against full
upfront payment. In other words, no credit sale of gold in any form will be
permitted for domestic use. In case, the nominated bank itself is operating the
Gold Deposit Scheme, the bank is permitted to use out of 80 kg, a portion for
regularising own open position in gold arising out of operations of the Gold
Deposit Scheme.
4. Next lot of import
of gold by ABC shall be permitted by the customs authorities only after
the quantity earmarked for exporter clients (i.e. 20 per cent of the imported
lot) is released to the exporters against their undertaking to fulfill the
export commitments within the stipulated time.
5. The quantum of gold
permitted to be imported in the third lot will be restricted to 5 times the
quantum for which proof of export is submitted. For import of gold in the
subsequent lots, the cycle may be repeated following the 20/80 principle.
Note: The same procedure is to be followed by the refineries and
by any other entity importing gold in any other form/ purity and in the case of
import of Gold Dore also.