08 जनवरी 2014
CCEA may consider import duty hike on refined oil to 10% tom
New Delhi, Jan 8. The Cabinet Committee on Economic
Affairs (CCEA) is expected to consider a proposal tomorrow to
hike import duty on refined edible oil to 10 per cent for
protecting domestic industry and farmers.
"The CCEA is scheduled to meet tomorrow and among other
things it will consider the Food Ministry's proposal of
increasing import duty on refined edible oils," said a source.
Currently, the import duty on crude edible oil is 2.5 per
cent, while on refined edible oil is 7.5 per cent. Since the
duty difference is only 5 per cent between the two varieties,
traders have resorted to higher import of refined oils,
thereby affecting the domestic refiners and farmers.
To keep domestic refiners from operating at under-
capacity, the Food Ministry has proposed duty difference of
7.5 per cent between the two varieties by raising import tax
on refined edible oil to 10 per cent, the source said.
If approved, the move is expected to fetch Rs 600 crore
revenue to the government, the source added.
Ministries of finance and commerce have endorsed the Food
Ministry's proposal. The Agriculture Ministry has however
recommended flexible import duty structure, whereby they would
automatically go up if global edible oil prices decline by a
certain level and fall as soon as international prices rise.
The edible oil industry has demanded increasing import
duty on refined edible oil to 30 per cent.
India produces 9 million tonne edible oil, while the
consumption is around 20 million tonne. The rest is met
through imports. In the 2012-13 fiscal, the country had
imported Rs 61,273 crore worth of edible oils.
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