Industry experts are of the view
that there has not been much emphasis on promotion of exports in the Union
Budget 2023-2024.
Presenting the budget on
Wednesday (Feb 05, 2023), Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman highlighted
customs reforms and duty rate changes that could benefit the exports sector.
“Customs’ reforms have played a very vital role in domestic capacity creation,
providing level playing field to our MSMEs, easing the raw material supply-side
constraints, enhancing ease of doing business and being an enabler to other
policy initiatives such as PLIs and phased manufacturing plans,” she stated.
Talking about how this will aid
the objective of Make in India and Atmanirbhar Bharat, the minister said that
the removal of exemption on items that can be manufactured in India and
offering concessional duties on raw materials that go into manufacturing of
intermediate products would be beneficial.
Experts say that such measures
will help in building an ecosystem of parts and components that can be
manufactured in India. “It will enable a conducive vendor ecosystem to be built
in India. Such incentives seem to address the granular aspects of the PLI
scheme so that parts are made in India. However, besides that, exports as a
segment did not get any special emphasis. Perhaps more specific sector export
promotion measures are likely to be addressed by the Foreign Trade Policy,”
says Atul Gupta, Partner, Deloitte India.
Gupta adds that the global
recessionary trends may have acted as a dampener. “There has been no increase
in Market Development Assistance. One big demand of industry body FIEO
(Federation of Indian Export Organisations) was the creation of an export
promotion fund, which also hasn't come by.”
Some of the other exemptions in
the budget were for items such as embellishments, trimming, fasteners, buttons,
zipper, lining material, specified leather, furniture fittings and packaging
boxes that may be needed by bonafide exporters of handicrafts, textiles and
leather garments, leather footwear and other goods.
Duty, the budget stated, was also
being reduced on certain inputs required for shrimp aquaculture so as to
promote exports.
Nitin Kunkolienker, President
Emeritus of MAIT and Director, Electronics Product Foundation (EPIC), says that
the budget should have focussed more on the facilitation of exports. “The
government has to touch upon the value chain. There are a lot of issues in the
value chain. Ports are located in states and there is a lot of apathy in
states. Look at port connectivity and labour issues at play. We may talk of
ease of doing business, but when you start importing or exporting via ports,
labour does not cooperate if their demands are not met. Such issues are not
dealt with and these impact the overall system,” he says.
Echoing similar views, A
Sakthivel, President, FIEO, says there is a need to encourage aggressive
marketing. While the allocation for the Market Access Initiative (MAI) Scheme
has increased from Rs 160 crore in 2022-23 to Rs 200 crore in 2023-24, this may
not be adequate. “Global trade shows are increasingly giving opportunities for
showcasing goods, and this needs to be exploited. A planned scheme for
aggressive overseas marketing may be notified with a sizeable corpus to
encourage exporters to showcase globally,” he says.
India has seen a steady rising
trajectory in exports. The country achieved an all-time high annual merchandise
export of $422 billion in FY22, the Economic Survey had stated on Tuesday.
However, it also added that the global economy has started facing formidable
headwinds and the ripple effect of the global trade slowdown has started
showing in India’s merchandise export growth, where a moderation in pace was
observed in 2022.
Talking about the services
sector, it noted how India maintained its dominance in global services trade in
FY22. “Despite pandemic-induced global restrictions and weak tourism revenues,
India’s services exports stood at $254.5 billion in FY22 recording a growth of
23.5% over FY21 and registering a growth of 32.7% in April-September 2022 over
the same period of FY22,” it added.
Source: Online
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