India may extend deadline for imposing retaliatory tariff on 29 US items by 14 days
Team Udayavani, Apr 26, 2019, 7:07 PM IST
New Delhi: India is likely to extend the deadline for imposing retaliatory customs duties on 29 US products, including almond, walnut and pulses, by another 14 days, a source said.
The commerce ministry is expected to recommend to the revenue department, under the finance ministry, to extend the deadline for imposing higher tariffs. The current deadline will end on May 2.
“The ministry will recommend extension of the deadline on retaliatory tariffs on imports from the US by another 14 days,” the source said.
If accepted by the finance ministry, the revenue department would issue a notification to that effect.
The government has already extended this deadline over half a dozen times since June 2018, when it decided to impose these duties in retaliation to a move by the US to impose high customs duties on certain steel and aluminium products.
The issue assumes significance with the US deciding to withdraw export incentives being provided by them to Indian exporters for certain goods under the Generalised System of Preferences (GSP) programme. The withdrawal is expected to come into force from May 2.
Domestic exporters are jittery over the US’ decision to withdraw these incentives as they export goods worth USD 5.6 billion under the GSP programme. About 1,900 items including from chemicals and engineering sectors avail these sops.
Both the sides were holding two-track discussions to increase trade in the short and medium term and identify long-term trade potentials.
India is pressing for exemption from the high duty imposed by the US on certain steel and aluminium products, resumption of export benefits to certain domestic products under their GSP programme, greater market access for its products from agriculture, automobile, automobile components and engineering sectors.
On the other hand, the US is demanding greater market access through a cut in import duties for its agriculture goods, dairy products, medical devices, IT and communication items. India has stated that it would be difficult for them to cut duties on IT products.
As part of the imposition of higher import duties, New Delhi has notified higher tariffs on several products. While import duty on walnut has been increased to 120 per cent from 30 per cent currently, duty on chickpeas, Bengal gram (chana) and masur dal will be raised to 70 per cent, from 30 per cent currently. Levy on lentils will be increased to 40 per cent, from 30 per cent. However, the notification has not yet been implemented.
India’s exports to the US in 2017-18 stood at USD 47.9 billion, while imports were USD 26.7 billion. The trade balance is in favour of India.
Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.
Top News
Related Articles More
Failure to disclose foreign assets, income to invite Rs 10L penalty: I-T dept
CBDT launches campaign to intimate taxpayers on undeclared foreign assets in ITR
Indian economy well placed to handle any kind of spillovers from global events: RBI Guv
Credifin Limited (previously PHF Leasing Limited) announces Q2 results for FY 2024-2025
In U-turn, global brokerage CLSA shifts focus back to India, cuts China exposure
MUST WATCH
Latest Additions
Ullal: Three students drown in resort swimming pool
Illegal Goa liquor seized in Bola village: One arrested
BJP leaders raising divisive slogans to polarise society, people shouldn’t fall for it: Kharge
Tempo crushes man to death, drags him in road rage incident in Surat; driver held
BJP using Waqf issue as ‘political weapon’: Karnataka Home Minister Parameshwara
Thanks for visiting Udayavani
You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.