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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, November 26, 2000 |
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Business
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Dealing with a surge in imports
The past week has witnessed a spate of decisions by the
Government to protect different sections of domestic industry
from imports. First, the customs duty on vegetable oils was
increased sharply. Then in order to counter the ``Chinese
threat'', two major decisions were taken.
The anti-dumping machinery of the Government of India
independently decided to investigate allegations of dumping of
dry batteries, toys and sports goods by China. And for perhaps
the first time ever the Government has decreed that imports (in
the first instance 131 commodities) have to meet the
specifications of the Bureau of Indian Standards, list the place
of manufacture and also the maximum retail price.
Such actions are bound to increase as the last batch of the
quantitative restrictions (QRs) on imports are removed next
April. Indian industry has been voicing an increasingly loud
chorus of complaints that foreign goods are going to ``de-
industrialise'' India. Especially strident in the past couple of
months is the complaint that Chinese products are swamping the
Indian market by offering a range of products at incredibly low
prices. The Government's decision to invoke BIS standards on a
large number of imports is a direct response to the complaints
about the Chinese threat, that is, non-tariff barriers (here
standards) can be used to keep out imports if tariffs cannot be
raised or do not help.
As the economy enters a qualitatively new phase from April 2001
there are bound to be more and more demands for protection. Some
and indeed many of these demands may be justified, though it is a
moot question how far they can be met without hurting a
downstream user of an imported component that becomes more
expensive or for that matter a consumer who will have to pay
more.
Further, with applied tariffs in a number of cases already close
to what they have been bound by India at the World Trade
Organisation, there is not much scope to further raise tariffs on
a number of products. (Edible oil is a notable exception where
the bound rate is 300 per cent but applied rates are under 80 per
cent.) There is also the danger that in some instances more could
be made out of import competition than is actually the case.
While a number of business chambers and individual firms have
been complaining of a flood of imports from China, it is still
not clear how widespread such a phenomenon this really is or if
it is one restricted to a narrow range of products and a small
geographic area. There are no official statistics showing a
recent surge in imports. (According to the statistics for 1999
India last year imported goods worth a measly $1.2 billion and
its exports were worth $825 billion.)
Industry's complaints are of three kinds. One, China is dumping
products. This is what is now going to be investigated for some
products by the Directorate General of Anti Dumping and Allied
Duties (DGAD), though there will doubtless be more products added
to the list. The second route is allegedly smuggling via Nepal
and Myanmar, though it is difficult to see a destruction of
swathes of Indian industry through such smuggling. This may
happen in a few cases like dry cell batteries - one product that
is on every one's lips and now on the DGAD's list as well. A
third route apparently taken by Chinese products is import into
Nepal and re-export to India at low duties, making use of the
concessional Indo-Nepal trade agreement.
While there are many complaints of the Chinese ``flood'' coming
down all three rivers, documented evidence is hard to come by of
large-scale and widespread dumping of any kind. ``Legal dumping''
- products imported legally but sold at less than normal price -
is something the DGAD will have to establish. The other two areas
are a matter for, one, the enforcement agencies, and, two, for
discussion between India and Nepal. (There is some talk of a
provision for value-addition norms being included in the Indo-
Nepal bilateral trade agreement.)
There are two dangers in an overreaction in case the Chinese
threat is not as large as it looks and is merely being used as an
excuse by an industry suffering from a demand recession in the
domestic market.
First, India has always complained that other countries unfairly
impose non-tariff barriers on Indian exports. The use of
arbitrary quality standards is often cited in this respect. India
cannot use the same stick on imports into the country and yet
effectively argue against other countries using such non-tariff
barriers.
Second, the imposition of anti-dumping duties can in some
situations badly affect domestic industry as well. A recent
example is the pig iron industry which after the imposition of
anti-dumping duties on coke imported from China has had to cut
back production.
Domestic pig iron production has fallen by more than 25 per cent
in the first half of 2000-01 because manufacturers now have to
use either the poorer quality Indian coke or more expensive coke
from other international suppliers.
It is not going to be easy dealing with import competition once
all QRs are removed. But even as the Government will have to use
all measures at its disposal (anti-dumping duties, higher tariffs
and the application of standards) to deal with unfair competition
from China, the U.S., the E.U. or any other country,
indiscriminate action will carry its own costs.
CRR
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