Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Monday, Feb 18, 2008
ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version


News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Industry & Economy - Exports & Imports
Web Extras - Taxation
‘Continue I-T sops for export-oriented units’

Kamal Nath for removal of sunset clause

G. Srinivasan

New Delhi, Feb. 17

In the run-up to the Union Budget 2008-09, the Commerce and Industry Minister, Mr Kamal Nath, has sought continuation of the income tax benefits bestowed on 100 per cent export-oriented units (EOUs), which are set to be removed after March 31, 2009.

Sources in the Government told Business Line here that in an identical communication to the Prime Minister’s Office and the Finance Ministry, Mr Nath pointed out that the accent of the UPA Government was always on encouraging manufacturing activities and augmenting employment, and on which the 100 per cent EOU scheme precisely scores well ever since it was introduced in the early 1980s.

Encouraging Manufacturing

He said that the EOU scheme was meant only for carrying out manufacturing activities within the custom-bonded area, and no trading activity was allowed under the scheme. The Minister said the scheme facilitated creation of dedicated manufacturing capability for exports, which amounted to Rs 68.782 crore with exports during the last five years from EOUs clocking more than 31 per cent growth.

The net foreign exchange earning by the EOUs is over 60 per cent. In the current fiscal, exports from EOUs would cross the one-lakh crore mark.

When contacted, the Council for 100 per cent EOUs and SEZs, the Director General, Mr L.B. Singhal, said that among the plethora of issues currently plaguing the units under the scheme, the most important one affecting them is the sunset clause under Section 10B of the Income Tax Act, under which no income tax exemption would be available for the exports effected by the 100 per cent EOUs after March-end, 2009.

Urgent need

Hence there is an urgent need for removal of the sunset clause in the forthcoming Union Budget, as otherwise no fresh investment would flow under the scheme.

“If no income tax exemption is provided from March 2009 onwards, there is no reason why any industrialist will set up a unit under this scheme and accept vigorous custom bonding regulations, procedure of obtaining procurement certificate for every import consignment or CT3 procedure for every domestic procurement and other procedural hassles like repeated registration with customs.

“No industrialist would like to pay unnecessary cost recovery charges for the Central Excise Inspectors posted for these units even for discharge of their sovereign functions,” Mr Singhal said.

Tax exemption

Even as there is an unstated principle that exporters should be exempted from indirect taxes, EOUs have to bear the burden of a host of indirect levies from the State Governments and local bodies such as purchase tax, entry tax, electricity duty, property tax, works tax, mining royalty, water cess, education cess, mandi tax, commercial tax and local area development tax.

Underlining the importance of income tax benefits to the EOUs, the Council said the EOUs could also be asked to re-invest the portion of profits to make them comparable with SEZ units, so that their basic remit of enhancing manufacturing activity and employment would continue.

As the Finance Ministry and the Ministry of Information Technology are reportedly toying with the extension of income tax benefits to Software Technology Park of India (STPI) Scheme, the Council said that EOU/STPI/Electronic Hardware Technology Park Schemes are all part of the same chapter of the Foreign Trade Policy and are governed by the same customs/central excise notification. Hence the sunset clause needs to be removed for 100 per cent EOU scheme as well, along with the STPI Scheme, the Council argued.

More Stories on : Exports & Imports | Budget | Taxation

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Stories in this Section
Rural job scheme


CII welcomes AP Budget
The balancing act
Yields firm on rise in oil prices, inflation focus
11th Plan hopes to achieve 15% enrolment by 2012
IMO’s tough air pollution rules
Bidding adieu
Coal India to introduce forward e-auction next month
Realty bug bites corporate houses
VAT: State builders object to collection methods
Gold likely to test support levels
‘Science Express’ arrives in Vizag
Sikkim to increase daily wage of labour force
Panel visiting Coimbatore to study export infrastructure
‘Continue I-T sops for export-oriented units’
Govt asks finance panel to look into refund of exporters’ State levies
Mangalore: Big potential for tourism growth

BusinessLine E-paper


The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2008, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line