SEZs’ Focus to Shift from Videsh to DESH –
Compulsory Value Addition through NFE may be dropped
·
Development of Enterprise and Service Hubs
(DESH), may be allowed to sell in the domestic market
·
Contract manufacture for those outside these
zones to be allowed
·
Fiscal incentives and measures to improve the
ease of doing business
·
‘Equalisation levy’
may be imposed on goods or services supplied to the domestic tariff area to
bring taxes on them at par with those provided by units outside the zones.
·
Appropriate legislation is likely to be
introduced in the upcoming monsoon session of Parliament
·
New legislation to enable states to become
partners
·
Relax also the mandatory foreign exchange
payment for domestic tariff area supplies
·
Proposals in the draft are from the 2019
report of an expert committee headed by Bharat Forge chairman Baba
Kalyani
India is proposing to transform its narrow export-focused
special economic zones (SEZs) into comprehensive economic hubs through several
concessions and the easing of restrictions to attract more investment in these
areas. Industrial units located in these hubs, which will be called Development
of Enterprise and Service Hubs (DESH), may be allowed to sell in the domestic
market, and contract manufacture for those outside these zones as well,
according to a draft circulated for consultation.
Some fiscal incentives and measures to improve the ease
of doing business are also likely to be part of the package to transform SEZs
into comprehensive economic zones. These hubs may be established by the Centre
or a state or jointly by them, or any person for the manufacture of goods or
rendering services or for both.
An ‘equalisation levy’ may be
imposed on goods or services supplied to the domestic tariff area to bring
taxes on them at par with those provided by units outside the zones. Currently,
units in SEZs can only export goods or services and can’t sell in the domestic
market.
Appropriate legislation is likely to be introduced in the
upcoming monsoon session of Parliament
once the draft is finalised after stakeholder
consultations, said people aware of the deliberations. Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman said in her February budget speech that the SEZ Act will
be replaced with new legislation to enable states to become partners in
development. States looking to set up such zones will be able to set up boards
that will be responsible for oversight.
It is also proposed to relax the mandatory foreign
exchange payment for domestic tariff area supplies and permit subcontracting
both for goods and services for DTA units. “The plan is to make the new SEZ
scheme compliant with the WTO rules and doing away with the Net Foreign
Exchange clause is the first step in that direction,” said one official.
Many proposals in the draft are from the 2019 report of
an expert committee headed by Bharat Forge chairman Baba Kalyani. The committee had suggested SEZs be converted into
employment and economic enclaves (3Es) with the extension of tax sunset
clauses, simplification of processes, tax benefits for the services sector, and
extension of MSME schemes to these zones.