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Indian Customs told to keep an eye on garments imported via Bangladesh

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Customs told to keep an eye on garments imported via Bangladesh

The DRI has asked the customs wing to look carefully at the origin certificates issued for such consignments by Bangladesh trade bodies.

https://m.economictimes.com/industr...orted-via-bangladesh/articleshow/70835424.cms

By Deepshikha Sikarwar, ET Bureau | Aug 26, 2019, 08.33 AM IST
The Directorate of Revenue Intelligence has sounded an alarm over garments being imported through Bangladesh from other countries to take advantage of duty concessions offered under a free-trade pact.

The DRI has asked the customs wing to look carefully at the origin certificates issued for such consignments by Bangladesh trade bodies.

“There is concern over growing cheap imports from third countries via Bangladesh,” a government official said, adding that the agency wants to ensure that only Bangladeshi origin imports are brought in.

The move comes after the DRI issued a show-cause notice in early August to Future Enterprises on 83 garment consignments, allegedly imported from third countries and routed via Bangladesh to take advantage of zero import duty. The agency fears that the route could be abused by other importers and wants the customs to remain alert.

Customs will now keep a close watch on garment imports under the South Asian Free Trade Areaagreement entering the country via Bangladesh, another government official said.

The South Asian Free Trade Agreement mandates 30% local value addition in least developed countries for import by other nations. Local value addition norms are incorporated in the trade pacts to not just protect the importing partner but also to ensure contribution to the exporting partner’s economy and local job creation through stringent value addition criterion.

“Such imports using the FTA route without any value addition don’t just defeat the whole objective of the agreement but also hurt the ‘Make in India’ initiative,” the person said.

The agency has written to the finance ministry to take up the matter of origin certificates issued in Bangladesh without adherence to local value addition norms. This is not the first time that violation of value-addition norms and rules of origin has come to fore. A similar issue had cropped up under the India-Thailand FTA with regard to gold jewellery imports and the India-Asean accord with regard to consumer durables imports.
 
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Customs told to keep an eye on garments imported via Bangladesh

The DRI has asked the customs wing to look carefully at the origin certificates issued for such consignments by Bangladesh trade bodies.

https://m.economictimes.com/industr...orted-via-bangladesh/articleshow/70835424.cms

By Deepshikha Sikarwar, ET Bureau | Aug 26, 2019, 08.33 AM IST
The Directorate of Revenue Intelligence has sounded an alarm over garments being imported through Bangladesh from other countries to take advantage of duty concessions offered under a free-trade pact.

The DRI has asked the customs wing to look carefully at the origin certificates issued for such consignments by Bangladesh trade bodies.

“There is concern over growing cheap imports from third countries via Bangladesh,” a government official said, adding that the agency wants to ensure that only Bangladeshi origin imports are brought in.

The move comes after the DRI issued a show-cause notice in early August to Future Enterprises on 83 garment consignments, allegedly imported from third countries and routed via Bangladesh to take advantage of zero import duty. The agency fears that the route could be abused by other importers and wants the customs to remain alert.

Customs will now keep a close watch on garment imports under the South Asian Free Trade Areaagreement entering the country via Bangladesh, another government official said.

The South Asian Free Trade Agreement mandates 30% local value addition in least developed countries for import by other nations. Local value addition norms are incorporated in the trade pacts to not just protect the importing partner but also to ensure contribution to the exporting partner’s economy and local job creation through stringent value addition criterion.

“Such imports using the FTA route without any value addition don’t just defeat the whole objective of the agreement but also hurt the ‘Make in India’ initiative,” the person said.

The agency has written to the finance ministry to take up the matter of origin certificates issued in Bangladesh without adherence to local value addition norms. This is not the first time that violation of value-addition norms and rules of origin has come to fore. A similar issue had cropped up under the India-Thailand FTA with regard to gold jewellery imports and the India-Asean accord with regard to consumer durables imports.

Ha ha ha Indiots...:rofl:

Their jealousy and envy now know no bounds, even though Bangladesh exports to India are literally going by the book.

The stories that these people weave. :lol:

Who'd make clothes any cheaper than Bangladesh and who'd take the trouble to route those to India via Bangladesh? Even Vietnamese labor cost is twice that of Bangladesh, as is for Thailand and Indonesia, not to mention China which is even higher....
 
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As usual, India is now looking for a few lame excuses in order to stop or slow BD garments to enter its market.
 
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What about the duty drawback that the exporter gets on exporting those chinese products to other countries....

Are you high ? Have you ever even been to Bangladesh?? Do you know how many garments factories there are in Bangladesh, and just in Dhaka alone??

With the world's lowest cost production and labor for garments, you think we will import Chinese garments??

China's labor cost is higher than that of Bangladesh, forget duty. Even India's is.

iu
 
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Are you high ? Have you ever even been to Bangladesh?? Do you know how many garments factories there are in Bangladesh, and just in Dhaka alone??

With the world's lowest cost production and labor for garments, you think we will import Chinese garments??

China's labor cost is higher than that of Bangladesh, forget duty. Even India's is.

iu
Bangladesh textile sector needs major investment to reduce fabric imports
by Apparel Resources News-Desk

12-February-2019 | 2 mins read

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Image Courtesy: Denimsandjeans.com
Bangladesh could be the second biggest apparel exporter globally but when it comes to fabrics, the country to a great extent is dependent yet on overseas destinations to fulfil its fabric requirements.

“As we cannot meet the full demand, China and India fill in the gap,” reportedly maintained President of Bangladesh Textile Mills Association (BTMA) Mohammad Ali Khokon speaking to the media, adding, “We need to build another 20 big textile mills which will be able to supply quality fabrics to the local garment exporters.”

As per the BTMA, currently the local textile mills can meet 85 per cent of the demand from the knitwear sector and 35 per cent from the woven sector and if the country is to further meet its requirements 20 big textile mills need to be set up, each at the cost of take Taka 500 crore approximately thereby taking the total investment to around Taka 10,000 crore, a substantial amount to say the least.

As per reports, the local textile millers can supply 4 billion metres of fabrics thereby necessitating Bangladesh to import 6 billion metres of fabrics from China and 3 billion metres from India, respectively.

However, with the target of US $ 50 billion in apparel exports by 2021 looming large, the role of local textile mills in fulfilling the domestic demand is becoming more and more important.

“We want a textile village as the Government has been establishing 100 special economic zones across the country,” reportedly underlined the BTMA President who observed that challenges such as high interest rates charged by banks, scarcity of industrial land, gas supply and setting of effluent treatment plants are some of the major hindrances towards attracting fresh investment to the sector.


http://apparelresources.com/busines...needs-major-investment-reduce-fabric-imports/
 
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Bangladesh textile sector needs major investment to reduce fabric imports
by Apparel Resources News-Desk

12-February-2019 | 2 mins read

facebook.svg

twitter.svg

linkedin.svg



Image Courtesy: Denimsandjeans.com
Bangladesh could be the second biggest apparel exporter globally but when it comes to fabrics, the country to a great extent is dependent yet on overseas destinations to fulfil its fabric requirements.

“As we cannot meet the full demand, China and India fill in the gap,” reportedly maintained President of Bangladesh Textile Mills Association (BTMA) Mohammad Ali Khokon speaking to the media, adding, “We need to build another 20 big textile mills which will be able to supply quality fabrics to the local garment exporters.”

As per the BTMA, currently the local textile mills can meet 85 per cent of the demand from the knitwear sector and 35 per cent from the woven sector and if the country is to further meet its requirements 20 big textile mills need to be set up, each at the cost of take Taka 500 crore approximately thereby taking the total investment to around Taka 10,000 crore, a substantial amount to say the least.

As per reports, the local textile millers can supply 4 billion metres of fabrics thereby necessitating Bangladesh to import 6 billion metres of fabrics from China and 3 billion metres from India, respectively.

However, with the target of US $ 50 billion in apparel exports by 2021 looming large, the role of local textile mills in fulfilling the domestic demand is becoming more and more important.

“We want a textile village as the Government has been establishing 100 special economic zones across the country,” reportedly underlined the BTMA President who observed that challenges such as high interest rates charged by banks, scarcity of industrial land, gas supply and setting of effluent treatment plants are some of the major hindrances towards attracting fresh investment to the sector.


http://apparelresources.com/busines...needs-major-investment-reduce-fabric-imports/

This doesn't mean jack squat.

All countries import fabrics. Even India does, for specialty orders such as for advanced breathable synthetics. And there will always be a scarcity of fabrics, if demand exceeds locally produced fabric quantity.

It is now abundantly clear you don't realize a lot about garments business.

Instead of running to Delhi in trying to stop Bangladeshi imports, tell your Bharti businessmen to invest in more modern efficient equipment and tell your govt. to give you the tax incentives you need.

Crying 'mama' and claiming dumping tariffs everytime an agile competitor beats you in business in your own home turf is a bad recipe for business. License raj and govt. subsidies in a closed market are gone in India, get used to it.
 
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@Dubious @waz @The Eagle @Oscar can you please open the thread please as I have more news on this to discuss. The thread was locked for no reason.

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/paki...d-behind-rohingya-rally-in-coxs-bazar.633377/

You can share more news separately and if it wasn't the usual anti-Pakistan rant by Hasina company, will merge both and restored. Don't mind but such attention seeking articles by Indian Fake Factory referring Pakistan for nothing; does not carry any weight.
 
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