Cheap Chinese Fashion
Jewellery Imports Surge 25%
·
Massive Duty Evasion alleged: Chinese Fashion
Jewellery Imports Surge 25%; Undercut Indian Makers by 50% by Reportedly Bypassing
HSN Code
Surge in Chinese Fashion Jewellery Imports & Duty Evasion
Market Impact
·
Chinese imports rose 25% YoY, now hold 50% of Indian market share (up from 25% in 2019–20).
·
Indian market expanded from ₹30,000
crore to ₹40,000 crore.
·
Chinese jewellery is ~50%
cheaper than Indian products due to alleged duty evasion.
Alleged Malpractices
·
Importers reportedly misdeclare goods and bypass HSN Code 7117,
which carries a duty of ₹600/kg.
·
Original levy (2022):
₹400/kg or 20% of value; revised in 2024 to ₹600/kg or 25%.
·
Clearing agents allegedly offer
bundled services (₹150–₹250/kg) to facilitate under-invoicing and
misclassification.
Domestic Industry Struggles
·
Mumbai, Rajkot, Singur, and Machilipatnam facing
production cuts and layoffs.
·
Example: Rajiv & Brothers in
Malad reduced staff from 60 to 20 due to falling orders.
·
North Mumbai’s manufacturing
units are struggling; Bhuleshwar market
remains dominated by Chinese goods.
Industry Voices
·
Nagendra Mehta (India Imitation
Jewellery Manufacturers’ Association): “Massive duty evasion by misdeclaration
and wrong HSN usage.”
·
Bharat Milee (Rajiv &
Brothers): “China’s tech edge and government support make competition
unsustainable.”
[ABS News Service/25.08.2025]
Indian
fashion jewellery makers are reeling under the surge of Chinese imports, which
rose 25% year-on-year. Industry executives said importers are misdeclaring shipments and under-invoicing goods to evade
anti-dumping duties, making Chinese jewellery nearly 50% cheaper than Indian
products.
Chinese
jewellery’s share of the Indian market has doubled to 50% in 2024-25 from 25%
in 2019-20, according to Nagendra Mehta, president of the India Imitation
Jewellery Manufacturers’ Association. Over the same period, the market itself
expanded from about Rs 30,000 crore to Rs 40,000 crore.
“The duty
hike could not prevent Indian fashion jewellery importers from importing
jewellery from China through malpractice. There is massive duty evasion by
wrong declaration of goods or by importing the goods under different HSN Code,”
Mehta said, as quoted by ET.
He added, “There are certain clearing and forwarding agents who charge Rs
150-250 per kg for freight charges, duty payment and logistics expenses and
deliver the goods to the buyers. We have already brought this to the notice of
the government and customs authorities.”
Imports are
reportedly bypassing the 7117 HSN Code for fashion jewellery, which carries a
duty of Rs 600 per kg. India had first imposed a levy in 2022 at Rs 400 per kg
or 20% of the value, whichever was higher, and raised it to Rs 600 per kg or
25% two years later. The HSN system is a global classification code covering
more than 5,000 products.
Mumbai, the
country’s biggest hub for fashion jewellery manufacturing and trading, has been
the hardest hit, with producers cutting production and workforce. Similar
challenges are being faced in Rajkot in Gujarat, Singur in West Bengal, and
Machilipatnam in Andhra Pradesh.
“Certain
customs clearing and forward agents are under-invoicing Chinese imported
jewellery,” Mehta reiterated.
Bharat
Milee, owner of Malad-based Rajiv & Brothers, said, “China is way ahead of
India in technology for producing low-cost jewellery at a mass scale. The
manufacturers there have also received government support. We are unable to
bring their technology and our focus is on quality products. Therefore, we are
suffering now.”
He added,
as cited by ET, “Earlier, my manufacturing unit had pending orders for three
months. Now the business has dwindled by 50%, forcing me to reduce my staff
strength from 60 to 20. Many units are failing to give wages to their workers
on time.”
North
Mumbai, home to numerous manufacturing units, is struggling for survival, while
South Mumbai’s Bhuleshwar market, a key trading hub,
remains dominated by Chinese supplies.