Wine Related Articles



  Tell a Friend about this article

 India Finally Cuts Duties On Imported Wines
 
 By: Subhash Arora   Page 1 of 1   

Following complaints from the EU and US on high duties levied by India the Finance Ministry withdrew yesterday all additional customs duties (ACD) on imported wines, beer and liquor through a notification by Central Board of Excise and Customs.

All ACD on wines and spirits have been removed but the government has increased the basic duty from 100% to 150%. Duties on beer and liquor remains unchanged at 100% and 150% respectively.

The removal of the duty comes shortly before the meeting of a WTO panel to consider the complaint of European Union and the USA against high Indian duties and taxes on foreign wines and spirits. The government had been saying all along that they would like to settle the issue before the WTO would take a negative decision.

The government had removed the import restrictions on wine and liquor completely in 2001, but subjected these products to additional customs duties, also known as Counter Vailing Duties at specified rates, presumably to provide level playing field to the domestic manufacturers, This additional duty was over and above the 150 per cent basic customs duty on spirit and liquors and 100 per cent on wine and beer.

Before April 1, 2001, the import of beer and alcoholic liquor was exempt from ACD in lieu of state excise duty while import of wines attracted additional duty of Customs at Rs 9 per litre.

Several foreign liquor, wine makers and embassies started to complain to the EU, and a European Commission study was conducted, which determined that the combination of duties and taxes in some states in India was as high as 550 per cent on imported spirits and 264 per cent on wines, well beyond the norms agreed by India with the WTO. (An additional education cess of 1% had been implemented for al imported products from this fiscal)

Acknowledging this step, a ministry release confirms that some of the Indian trading partners (mainly EU and US) had complained that “the additional duty of customs is not equivalent to an internal tax within the meaning of GATT 1994, as the additional duty of customs exceeds the excise duty rates on like products in some Indian states”.

The ministry also said that they had decided to withdraw the additional customs duty after discussing the issue with state governments.

While the Centre has acted on the additional customs duties, which fall within the Centre’s domain, the government is expected to empower states to levy duties and allow them to recoup revenue losses. State governments are also expected to carry out a re-look of their duty structure to bring about parity between the levy on imported and domestic liquor.

The center is planning to bring the countervailing duty (CVD) on imported foreign alcoholic beverages in line with the state excise duties through the Countervailing Duty on Imported Alcoholic Liquors Bill, 2007. The Bill seeks to empower states to collect the countervailing duty on imported liquor, at the rate equal to each state’s excise duty on domestically manufactured liquor.

At present, the excise duty varies across states. Some states like Gujarat do not even allow the sale of alcohol. The Indian Constitution grants the states this privilege.

Subhash Arora

July4,2007




About the Author:
Founded Delhi Wine Club five years ago to promote wine culture in India through education by organizing various programmes and training seminars, wine tasting dinners etc.Writing content and managing India's first wine webzine, with India-centric wine news since inception. The Club has organised 105 events in 5 years and has been been voted the best wine club of India by the first-ever survey carried out by Wine Business International, Germany. Wine passion has taken him to various wine fairs, vineyards and conferences around the world. He has written regularly for a popular daily under, 'Wonderful World of Wine'and a couple of national magazines. An engineer from IIT, Delhi with Master's degrees in Industrial Engineering and Business Administaration from the University of Minnesota, he has been actively promoting wine in India by delivering talks, organizing wine appreciation courses,training waiters and managers,designing wine menus and offering wine consultancy. He has been a juror for the Vinitaly Wine Competition in 2006. He has been invited to be a speaker at various international forums like Vinitaly, Prowein and Fenavin. He is also the India correspondent of Wine Business Interntional. He is the editor article contributor of delWine, an eNewsletter that goes out to about 6000 people around the world. He has been also voted 'the Best Wine Journalist' in the Who's Who Survey.


Website Name: Delhi Wine Club
Website URL: www.delhiwineclub.com


 Return to Article Listing   Page 1 of 1   




177,054

Wine Tasting and
Food Events since
July 2000

Site Map    FAQs
LocalWineEvents.com
Web





Home | Wine Events by Date | Submit Wine Events | Events on Your Site | Wine Articles | The Big Festival List
Wine Education| FAQs | Wine Newsletters | Wine Books | Magazines | Links | The Juice! | Tell a Friend
Press | Privacy Policy | History | Kudos | Contact us | Advertise | Site Map/Search | Top Blogs | Feeds
Videos

Copyright © 2000-2008, LocalWineEvents.com