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Sunday, June 14, 1998

Talks on steel subsidy with EU soon

ENS ECONOMIC BUREAU  
NEW DELHI, June 13: The Centre begins parleys with the European Union Commission later this month on anti-subsidy cases against Indian steel exports, after having lost the subsidy battle over antibiotics.

The Union commerce ministry has proposed June 23 as the date for pre-initiation consultations with the European Union on alleged subsidies on stainless steel fine wires. The following day the EU begins hearing the anti-subsidy complaint against Indian stainless steel bright bars.

Meanwhile, steel exporters have resolved to build infrastructure to tackle anti-dumping and anti-subsidy cases abroad. Indian steel exporters face anti-dumping charges in the European Union, Canada and the United States, apart from anti-subsidy charges in the EU.

All the three anti-subsidy cases against Indian steel exports have been lodged by EUROFER, a club of Community steel producers. The European Community club of 18 steel producers has lodged two complaints, one against stainless steel fine wires of one millimetre widthand the second against finer grades of the same item.

The European steel-makers had earlier initiated similar proceedings against stainless steel bright bars. The EU Commission will hear the anti-subsidy case against stainless steel bright bars on June 24.

The Centre has already engaged Brussels-based attorneys, Van Bael and Bellis, to defend the case against Indian stainless steel fine wire exports. The attorneys are also defending the antibiotics case.

The European Union is treating all the concessions made available to Indian exporters in the Income Tax Act and the Exim Policy as subsidies. The Union commerce ministry, however, considers these schemes as `GATT compatible'.

Sections 10 A and 10 B of the Income Tax Act allow tax holidays to export oriented units and export promotion zones, for the first five years after inception. Section 80 HHC completely exempts export profits from tax.

The Exim Policy allows exporters to claim duty drawbacks through the Duty Entitlement Passbook Scheme (DEPB)and the export promotion scheme for capital goods imports (EPECG). Should the initial consultations with the EU on the anti-subsidy complaint against stainless steel fine wires fail on June 23, the centre intends to hire legal services for that case too.

Meanwhile, dumping duties overshadowed the first business meeting of the Steel Exporters' Forum last week.

Copyright © 1998 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.


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