Disclosing End-use of Goods Must while Claiming Concessional Import
Duties
Move aimed at enabling tracking of goods to ensure they
don't end up in replacement market
Those importing goods
at concessional rates will have to submit information on end use of these
products on a portal developed by the Customs Department on monthly as well as
annual bases.
This has been done to
enable the tracking of these goods by the authorities to ensure that the goods
are used in specified manufacturing and not in the replacement market. r
If these goods are
used for the replacement market, normal tariffs will apply, said Abhishek Jain,
partner indirect
tax at
KPMG.
The lower rates under
The Customs (Import of Goods at Concessional Rate of Duty for Specified End
Use) Rules apply for sectors such as telecom, electronics, and electric vehicles.
The information will
have to be provided on the Indian Customs and Central Excise Electronic
Commerce/Electronic Data Interchange (EC/EDI) Gateway (ICEGATE), an online
portal.
While ICEGATE has
existed for many years now, this has been specified in the Customs (Import of
Goods at Concessional Rate of Duty for Specified End Use) Rules, 2022, now.
There were, however,
complaints earlier that the ICEGATE did not function properly. “Proper
functioning of the common portal would need to be seen and challenges in the
current portal needs to be addressed by the government for the success of the
new rules,” said Saurabh Agarwal, tax partner at EY.
Disposal of capital
goods
Claiming
depreciation Customs
duty on
disposal of capital goods has also been provided under these rules.
This means that if an
entity imports capital goods worth Rs 100 crore and sells it after three years,
it will be charged duty on only Rs 40 crore and not Rs 100 crore, given the
rate of depreciation of 20 per cent a year.
The rules also
allowed re-crediting of bonds, which have to be furnished to the authorities
for importing goods under concessional duties. These bonds can now be re-credited
even before filing monthly returns. In simple terms, this means that if you
file a bond of, say, Rs 2 crore, and paid a concessional duty of Rs 1 crore
that the government has debited from your bonds electronically, the value of
your bond would reduce to Rs 1 crore. Now, lenders will say that the value of
your bond is less and may not give you the required credit. For this purpose,
even if you tell the Customs department about the end use of the goods, your
bond would be re-credited to Rs 2 crore without waiting for monthly returns.
“The new rules
provide for immediate recredit of bonds without waiting for monthly returns.
This is a welcome step for trade facilitation as well as towards ease of doing
business,” Agarwal said.