Indian Chemical Council raises concerns over RCEP

  • Industry News
  • Oct 19,19
The association wants government to protect the economy from the flooding of cheap imports of Chinese chemicals by ensuring that there is no misuse of ‘Rules of Origin’ clause in RCEP
Indian Chemical Council raises concerns over RCEP

Mumbai
 
With the final round of Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) negotiations due in November 2019, concerns have been flagged by the Indian Chemical Council (ICC) to prevent misuse of ‘Rules of Origin’ since it places the members of RCEP into a quasi-bloc with higher dominance of China. 
 
Built as world’s biggest trade agreement, the RCEP - comprising of 10 ASEAN countries with its 6 Free Trade Agreement (FTA) partners including India, China, Australia, New Zealand, Japan and South Korea - are likely to completely transform the global trade dynamics. However, the biggest issue for India is to protect the economy from the flooding of cheap imports of Chinese chemicals, creating an enormous disadvantage for the Indian chemical industry. The Indian chemical industry is an industry-of-industries with a combined turnover of $ 150 billion.
 
Welcoming the Government’s move on proactively seeking feedback from the domestic industry on the ongoing RCEP negotiations and making sincere efforts to safeguard the interests of the Indian manufacturers, the ICC felt the Indian Government has been moving cautiously and felt it was unclear if their demand for applying product-specific ‘Rules of Origin’ under RCEP to avoid unscrupulous exporting of negative list goods to India would be implemented. Rules of Origin under RCEP have a criterion which can potentially prove to be damaging for products with multiple stage production process. Termed as ‘Produced Entirely’, it suggests that in a multi stage production process if all the inputs in the final production stage are from RCEP countries, its origin will be conferred.
 
Elaborating on the issue, H S Karangle, Director General of Indian Chemical Council, said, “The liberal origin rules adopted under the RCEP coupled with the ‘regional cumulation’ rule would permit the latter country to be treated as the country of origin and accordingly, the goods imported into India from this country would get preferential treatment, as the product figures in the positive list for tariff liberalisation for that country. In this way, MFN duties otherwise applicable on the goods imported from China can easily be circumvented.”
 
Under RCEP, the tariff liberalisation is not uniform for all the participating countries. In case of China, India’s offer list reportedly covers around 74-80 per cent of the tariff lines and this implies that around 20-25 per cent of the tariff lines should be excluded from the tariff cuts. Whereas, in the case of other RCEP countries, the offer list reportedly covers around 90 per cent of the tariff lines. In the case of these countries, tariffs would be phased out over a period of time ranging from 10 years to 25 years. The industry has already proposed that product-specific rules of origin should be formulated at least for those products which are not subject to tariff cuts under the RCEP or where the tariff differential has been prescribed.
 
From the industry’s point of view, the better origin rule should be such that the originating status goods would be conferred by applying the twin criteria of 40 per cent value addition plus change in tariff sub-heading/heading, as adopted under ASEAN-India FTA and SAFTA. Another option worth exploring would be to confer origin based on 40 per cent value addition criterion only, as adopted under ASEAN-China FTA. This would be much better than the existing agreed upon rule, under which origin shall be conferred by applying one of the two criteria, via 40 per cent value addition or change in CTH.
 

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