“Imports of condom are subject to basic customs duty as
previously,” Unnikrishnan S.M., associate vice president
of corporate strategy at HLL Lifecare which makesf Moods
condoms, told The Hindu in an emailed response to
questions. “The real challenge would be in ensuring the
quality of condoms being imported. The Indian condom
industry has adequate capacity to cater to the demands
of the market. “This is the case for all exempt goods,
they cannot avail of input credits,” Archit Gupta,
Founder of ClearTax.com. “This could make manufacturing
in India more expensive, especially for goods whose
inputs have become more expensive under GST. “Since full
input tax credit is not available for this product, the
cost of production will be high in the GST regime and
will adversely affect the margins,” Mr.Unnikrishnan
added.
“The situation can be saved if condom manufactures are
allowed to take input tax credit since output tax is
zero.” Durex India declined to comment when contacted by
The Hindu.
Tax on rubber The GST Council has decided to tax natural
rubber at 5% and synthetic rubber at 18%, something the
All India Rubber Industries Association has protested
saying that this tax burden was higher than what existed
before GST. Rubber-based latex is a major input in
condoms. However, the predicament faced by the
manufacturers of exempt goods is one of the main reasons
why the government has chosen to instead levy a tax on
some products. “It is precisely due to this breaking of
the chain of input credits that the government tried to
exempt as few items as possible,”
Mr. Jain said. “If the industry wants to avail of input
tax credits, then they could maybe petition the
government for a concessional tax rate of 5%.” This is
the argument the government had made earlier this month
regarding the tax rate on another sensitive and
essential item —sanitary napkins. “Reducing the GST rate
on sanitary napkins to nil will, however, result in
complete denial of ITC (input tax credits) to domestic
manufacturers of sanitary napkins and zero rating
imports,” the Finance Ministry said in a statement
following outrage in certain circles over the 12% GST
rate on the napkins.
“This will make domestically manufactured sanitary
napkins at a huge dis-advantage vis-ŕ-vis imports, which
will be zero rated.”
Source::: The Hindu,
dated 29/07/2017.