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Is your 'Made in India' smartphone in danger?

December 20, 2016 16:46 IST

India has been able to attract 40 global smartphone makers to the country -- creating at least 50,000 jobs. But GST could hurt that, discovers Ayan Pramanik.

Modi selfie smartphone

IMAGE: GST could become a roadblock to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's 'Make in India' initiative by neutralising the cost benefits for global smartphone makers to produce in India. Photograph: Adrien Helou/Reuters.

 

India's success in making firms such as Samsung, Xiaomi, and Micromax locally produce phones could become a cropper once the Goods and Services Tax (GST) comes into effect, as the new taxation regime could neutralise the cost benefits to make these phones in India.

Since the last two years, India has been able to attract 40 global smartphone makers in the country, after it tweaked norms that made it cheaper to make phones in India and sell it to the billion strong mobile subscribers. At the same time, the government has been able to scale investments in electronic manufacturing over ten-fold to Rs 1.24 lakh crore from Rs 11,000 crore two years ago.

"There is a near 10 per cent tax arbitrage for manufacturing mobile phones in India in the current tax regime. However, once GST is implemented, it will be different. We hope that the Government will try and protect the arbitrage in some manner," said Prateek Jain, partner and national leader, Indirect Tax, PwC India.

An IIM-B Counterpoint report released in November 2016 estimates that 180 million mobile phones were to be manufactured in India in 2016, which is a nearly 125 per cent growth over the year-ago period. This has also helped in creating nearly 50,000 jobs.

In the last Budget, the finance ministry proposed a concession and announced 1 per cent excise duty (output tax on manufactured goods) on phones manufactured in India. But, phones that are imported were announced to be levied with a 12.5 per cent excise duty. Besides, all components used for manufacturing mobile phones in India were exempted from customs duty.

The higher import duties helped push local manufacturing that prompted iPhone's contract manufacturer Foxconn committing to expand aggressively in India.

Once GST comes into effect, the mobile phone manufacturer may end up paying the maximum share of the 18 percent unified tax (proposed under GST), and it will be difficult to segregate the excise duty component out of the total GST. Mobile handset manufacturers such as Micromax, Samsung, Lava and Xiaomi declined comment.

"If the mobiles are manufactured in India there is an option of 1 per cent duty without taking credit. Going forward the excise duty is going to be subsumed in the GST and the entire chain would be creditable so they cannot pick and do an exemption on the basis of domestic manufacturing," said Bipin Sapra, partner, Indirect Taxes, EY India.

Tax experts have urged the government to continue the tax differentials and maintain it at a minimum 8-9 per cent rate. "We are telling them to incentivise (domestic) manufacturing. Effectively we are talking about differential of 8-9 percent only because there is a single point tax, which is excise duty and is not creditable. That's a cost for manufacturing," added Sapra.

The electronic devices manufacturers' body, however, says GST being on transaction value as against excise duty on MRP should reduce the tax burden on mobile manufacturers in India.

"Instead of paying taxes at multiple levels of government, including State and Central, there will be one tax allowing companies to save from the existing cumulative 25-30 per cent tax burden and reduce it to 17-18 per cent through a single unified tax and the advantage of logistics and processing costs thereof," said K Krishnamoorthy, chairman, India Electronics & Semiconductor Association.

IESA is wary of another aspect post GST.

In the GST regime, the States will subsume all the taxes and levies. Krishnamoorthy says the industry will have to wait and see whether States will extend the lower GST rates to honour the competitive advantage promised to mobile phone manufacturers.

Ayan Pramanik
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