Govt Set to Clear Pending Dues of Exporters,
Increase Allocation to RoDTEP to Rs.17000 crs from Rs.13,000 crs, All 11K Lines to Get RoDTEP
·
Special Scheme
for SEZs being crafted
Finally,
the Centre is planning to clear the pending dues of exporters after months of
delay. The allocation under Remission of Duties and Taxes on Export Products (RoDTEP) scheme, that was put in place,
is being enhanced to Rs 17,000 crore for the current
financial year, against Rs 13,000 crore provided
earlier. In addition, Rs 2,000 crore is being
provided to clear the arrears of services exporters for 2019-20 under the
now-defunct Service Exports from India Scheme (SEIS), the Times of India
mentioned in a report.
This
was decided after extensive consultation between the finance and commerce
ministries, with the entire mechanism being finalised
at the highest level. Proposals for the Cabinet have also been moved and a
decision is expected too, the publication mentioned citing official
sources.
The
finance ministry had hoped to save a large amount of funds due to reworking the
export promotion schemes. It had also re-deployed large parts to the production-linked
incentive (PLI) schemes, which will entail an allocation of close to Rs 2 lakh crore over five years.
These
moves will provide much-needed relief to exporters in the services sector as
they have been hit hard by the pandemic.
Despite
the government announcing the new scheme RoDTEP from
April to ensure that goods shipped from India do not become uncompetitive due
to state and central levies, goods exporters have not been given refund of
levies.
While
the finance ministry was not seeing anything wrong with the steps it had taken
in the Budget, the entire problem was due to lower allocation made by it. Due
to lower budget, the scheme was getting restricted to only a few segments.
The
enhancement of the allocation will now enable the commerce and revenue
departments to refund duties paid by all exporters. “The coverage of RoDTEP will be available to all the 11,000 tariff lines for
which rates will be notified,” the daily quoted an officer as saying.
A
mechanism is also being proposed for units in special economic zones (SEZs),
with the details to be worked out in the coming months. A panel comprising
experts as well as industry representatives will look into the mechanism.
There
is, however, no clarity yet on some of the dues from the erstwhile Merchandise
Exports from India Scheme (ME-IS) that was abandoned as the US dragged India to
the WTO, arguing that it was not compliant with global rules.
In
fact, several other schemes have been wound up too, making RoDTEP
the primary tool, with the focus now shrinking to refunding levies, instead of
providing incentives.
The
enhancement of the allocation will now enable the commerce and revenue
departments to refund duties paid by all exporters. “The coverage of RoDTEP will be available to all the 11,000 tariff lines for
which rates will be notified,” the daily quoted an officer as saying.
A
mechanism is also being proposed for units in special economic zones (SEZs),
with the details to be worked out in the coming months. A panel comprising
experts as well as industry representatives will look into the mechanism.
In
fact, several other schemes have been wound up too, making RoDTEP
the primary tool, with the focus now shrinking to refunding levies, instead of
providing incentives.