In India, import taxes on edible oils cut sharply as retail inflation rises

게시됨 2021년 10월 14일

Tridge 요약

The Indian government has reduced the agriculture cess on imported oils from 20% to 5% and removed a 2.5% basic import duty, in an effort to combat rising retail inflation in "oils and fats". The move is expected to lower the effective import duty on crude and refined palm, soybean, and sunflower oil. However, analysts suggest that consumers may not see significant relief from these measures, as palm oil prices in Malaysia have increased following the duty cut announcement. The government's decision may also negatively impact farmers selling oilseeds.
면책 조항: 위의 요약은 정보 제공 목적으로 Tridge 자체 학습 AI 모델에 의해 생성되었습니다.

원본 콘텐츠

As retail inflation in edible “oils and fats” surged to second-highest level in 2021 in September, the government on Wednesday cut agriculture cess on imported oils to 5% and 7.5% on various items from 20% earlier while also removing 2.5% basic import duty.However, the duty reduction may not result in any big relief to consumers despite the government likely to lose about Rs 34,000 crore in revenues, analysts said, pointing to Wednesday’s increase in palm oil prices in Malaysia.“Consumers may not get full benefit of the duty reduction. In fact, after the duty cut was announced by India, the Malaysian market has gone up by about RM 150-170 per tonne,” said BV Mehta, executive director of Solvent Extractors Association of India.Wednesday’s announcement will translate into a reduction in effective import duty on crude and refined varieties of palm oil, soyabean oil and sunflower oil between 16.5 and 19.25 percentage points. The cut will be effective from October 14. The consumer ...

더 깊이 있는 인사이트가 필요하신가요?

귀사의 비즈니스에 맞춤화된 상세한 시장 분석 정보를 받아보세요.
'쿠키 허용'을 클릭하면 통계 및 개인 선호도 산출을 위한 쿠키 제공에 동의하게 됩니다. 개인정보 보호정책에서 쿠키에 대한 자세한 내용을 확인할 수 있습니다.