Bangladesh hikes orange import duty for India
Recently the Bangladesh government proposed hike in import duty on oranges from present Rs31 per kg to Rs39 per kg
Bangladesh has recently proposed a hike in the import duties on orange and the Indian orange traders are not happy with that.
The association of the orange traders, All India Indo-Bangla Orange Export Association (Warud) has urged the Indian central government to pursue Bangladesh to stall the recent hike in import duty on oranges, reports Times of India.
Sonu Khan, president of the association, said, "Recently the Bangladesh government proposed hike in import duty on oranges from present Rs31 per kg to Rs39 per kg. Already, the total tax incidence on import of oranges at present is over 92%, which is very high considering an essential food item, especially during Covid-19."
Secretary of the association Ramesh Jichkar met highways minister Nitin Gadkari and highlighted the problem. Jichkar said, "Nagpur and Amravati divisions together produce 7 lakh MT oranges on 1.26 lakh hectares. Of this, Bangladesh alone imports 25% of the produce, and the rest of the stock is supplied to Indian markets. If the import duty is hiked it will put an additional burden of Rs100 crore on traders."
Jichkar added that the export of one truckload of orange (25tonnes) to Bangladesh costs Rs8.50 lakh. "It includes the cost of labour, packaging, transport and duties. After the hike in import duty, this cost will go up to Rs10 lakh. During season daily 250 truckloads of oranges are transported to Bangladesh," said Jichkar.
Gadkari has asked railway minister Piyush Goyal, agriculture minister Narendra Singh Tomar, external affairs minister S Jaishankar and Indian high commissioner to Bangladesh Vikram Doraiswami to look into the matter.