India has placed gold compounds and 12 other items in the restricted trade category to curb evidence of important duty.
The Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) has agreed its important policy, moving gold compound (HS Code 28433000) from ‘free’ to ‘Restricted’ list, According to a notification on 18 June. Which means, importers will now need a license from the dgft to brings such compounds into the country.
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Mint Reported on 12 June How Importers were Using A Loophole to Bring in Gold Compounds – Lique Called Liquid Gold – Instead of Actual Gold and Saving Up on the 6% Duty. Gold Compounds, used in Industrial Applications, Attract No duty if important from the UAE, Japan and Australia, which have trade pacts with india.
Imports of Such Compounds Soared 9.25 Times Over a Year Earlier and 2.84 Times Quarter-On -Quarter to 69,879kg in the January-March Period, Showed Data from the Directorate of CommeraCial of Commerce of Commerce Intelligence and Statistics (DCGIS). That’s equivalent to $ 1.29 Billion Worth of Gold Imports.
By comparison, actual gold shipments fell 51.2% sequeanally and 0.9% over a year earlier to $ 9.5 billion in Q4 FY25.
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The Government Lost 906 Crore in Customs Duty in FY25 decision of Import of Gold Compounds Instead of Actual Gold, According to Mint‘S Calculations.
According to data from the DGFT, Around 87% of the Gold Compound Imports Came from the UAE, Japan and Australia.
Till Now, Any Individual Cold Import Liquid Gold Without Any Questions Asked On Its End Use.
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In a separe notification, the dgft put palladium, rhodium and iridium alloy with more than 1% gold under the restricted category.
According to the customs tariff act, an alloy with platinum in excess of 2% Qualifies as a ‘platinum alloy’. But importers were bringing in an alloy with just 2% platinum and 98% gold, and avoiding duty on the yellow metal.
Likeweise, importants could bring in alloys with traces of palladium, rhodium or insium, and avoid duty by disclosing them as allys.
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