Special Economic Zones in India |
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Many
developing countries including India are facing the problem of regional
imbalances and capital scarcity. Vast and untapped commercial resources of
an underdeveloped area can be utilized by establishing special economic
zones. A Special Economic Zone (SEZ) is a geographical region that has
economic laws that are more liberal than a country's typical economic
laws. India was one of the 1st Asian countries to establish an
EPZ in Kandla in 1965 with a view to bring expertise for the country's
export sector. In April 2000, the SEZ policy was announced as a part of
the Export-Import (EXIM) policy of India to overcome the shortcomings on
account of absence of world class infrastructure, unstable fiscal regime,
multiplicity of controls and clearances. A SEZ bill was prepared after
extensive discussions with the Ministry of Commerce and Industry and many
other senior officials and eventually SEZ Act was passed in Parliament of
India in May 2005, which received presidential assent on 23 rd
June, 2005. The SEZ Act in India came into force on 10th
February 2006.
The main objectives:
Incentives for Development of SEZs:
Many lucrative incentives are provided by the SEZ Act
to attract investments. Few amongst them are: 100 percent tax exemption
for industries on export profits for first five years, 50% for next 5
years thereafter and 50% of the ploughed back export profit for next 5
years; provision of 100 percent foreign direct investment in industries
under automatic route; duty free import/domestic procurement of goods for
development, operation and maintenance of SEZ units; exemption from
central sales tax and service tax; exemption from minimum alternate tax
under section 115JB of the Income Tax Act; external commercial borrowing
by SEZ units upto US $ 500 million in a year without any maturity
restriction through recognized banking channels; exemption from state
sales tax and other levies as extended by the respective State
Governments; single window clearance for central and state level
approvals.
Amendments:
In the Special Economic Zones Rules, 2006 in rule 5, in
sub-rule (2), for clause (a) clause had been substituted, namely:-
A Special Economic Zone for multi product shall have a
contiguous area of one thousand hectares or more but not exceeding 5000
hectares; Provided that in case a Special Economic Zone is proposed to be
set up in Assam, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram, Manipur,
Tripura, Himachal Pradesh, Uttaranchal, Sikkim, Jammu and Kashmir, Goa or
in a Union territory, the area shall be two hundred hectares or more:
Provided further that at least fifty per cent of the
area shall be earmarked for developing the processing area.".
Response from Industry:
The overwhelming response to the SEZ scheme is evident
from the flow of investment and creation of additional employment in the
country. The SEZ scheme has generated tremendous response amongst the
investors, both in India and abroad, which is evident from the list of
Developers who have set up SEZs namely: Nokia SEZ in Tamil Nadu ,
Quark City SEZ in Chandigarh , Flextronics SEZ in Tamil Nadu, Mahindra
World City in Tamil Nadu, Motorola, DELL and Foxconn, Apache SEZ (Adidas
Group), Divvy's Laboratories in Andhra Pradesh, Rajiv Gandhi Technology
Park, Chandigarh, ETL Infrastructure IT SEZ, Chennai, Hyderabad Gems
Limited, Hyderabad.
Exports from SEZs:
Exports from the functioning SEZs during the last three
years
Criticism: The
issue of SEZ has been a "hot cake" of controversy especially in
politics. Some consider SEZ to be important for India's economic growth
others criticize it as an official tool used by big industrialists to grab
lands from farmers for making money. The protests in Nandigram and Singur
against establishment of SEZs have created a lot of political turmoil.
Similar protests can be seen from millions of people from the states of
Haryana, Orissa, Maharashtra and others for not giving their lands for SEZ
projects. Such protests are supported by important personalities, social
activists, politicians and many NGOs. The threat of massive displacement
from agricultural areas has been the main focus of these agitations..Most
of the fertile and agricultural land is being covered under SEZs to build
buildings, malls and supermarkets. Establishment of SEZs also causes huge
revenue loss to the country as it encourages the tax paying businesses to
shift to tax free zones.
References:
Survey of Indian Industry, 2006,2007, The Hindu.
www.sezindia.nic.in The Hindu, daily newspapers www.economist.com |