FICCI CASCADE: International Conference on Cross Border Illicit Trade in Goods: Impact on Economy and Consumers


 Fighting the Invisible Enemy: Smuggled Goods, a Threat to India’s Interests

§  According to Department of Revenue Intelligence (DRI), seizures of smuggled cigarettes has seen the highest rise at 78.53%, followed  by fabric/silk  at 73% and gold at 61.6% over past one year - FICCI CASCADE publication on ‘Invisible Enemy – A Threat to Our National Interests’  
 §  Anti – Smuggling Awards - FICCI CASCADE feliciates best performing officers from law enforcment agencies

NEW DELHI, December 08, 2016. FICCI CASCADE organized its International Conference on Cross Border Illicit Trade in Goods: Impact on Economy and Consumers in collaboration with the Department of Consumer Affairs, Govt. of India. The conference was organized with an aim to ensure that national and international stakeholders can dialogue with policy makers to identify opportunities for joint action between governments and the private sector to combat illicit cross border trade. 

FICCI: International Conference on Cross Border Illicit Trade in Goods: Impact on Economy and Consumers


Inaugurating the conference, Shri Hem Pande, Secretary, Department of Consumer Affairs, Govt. of India said, “Operations in illicit cross border trade, is a global problem of enormous scale, impacting virtually every product sector and every country. The illicit market for fake or counterfeit or smuggled products is also one of the biggest challenges faced by Indian industry, which is impacting ‘Brand India’ globally. Given the key role of technology, invention, and innovation in India’s current economic development, the value of “Indian made” products where legitimate business owners’ rights are safeguarded is a key to sustain the country’s growth strategy. Addressing these issues cannot be done in isolation; it is a joint responsibility of consumers, enforcement agencies, the industry and the government.”

On this occasion, a report – ‘Invisible Enemy – A Threat to Our National Interests’ – focusing on the negative impact of smuggled goods on the Indian economy and businesses was released. According to the report there are five goods where the seizures by DRI has been the highest in the past few years. These five goods are:

1.     Gold
2.     Cigarettes
3.     Machinery Parts
4.     Fabric/silk yarn
5.     Electronic items  
The report findings highlight that smugglers are now switching over to cigarettes and fabric/silk yarn as they are low-risk, high-reward goods. As per the report, in the last one year, the DRI seizures of smuggled cigarettes has increased by 78% (from Rs. 90.75 crores in 2014-15 to Rs. 162 crore in 2015-16) followed by fabric/silk yarn, where the increase is by 73% (from Rs. 24.03 crores in 2014-15 to Rs. 41.78 crore in 2015-16). The seizures of gold have witnessed an increase of 61% (from Rs. 692.35 crore in 2014-15 to Rs. 1119.11 crore in 2015-16). While the DRI seizures of machinery parts and electronic items has seen a decline.

Seizure of Smuggled Goods (Rs. Crore)
Product / Commodity
2014-15
2015-16
%age Increase / Decrease
Cigarettes
90.75
162
78.5%
Fabric / Silk Yarn
24.03
41.78
73.8%
Gold
692.35
1119.11
61.6%
Machinery Parts
563.18
447.1
- 20.6%
Electronic Items
37.85
17.98
- 52.5%
​​
On the other hand, the smuggling in fabrics/silk and yarn is primarily driven by the demand-supply gap and the dependence on imports. The Indian textiles industry faces acute shortage of raw materials in the form of cotton and raw silk. While India is the second biggest producer of silk, it is also the second biggest importer of silk in the world (India’s share in 12% of the total world imports) after Italy. India’s dependence on imports of silk and yarn has seen a consistent increase over the last 5 years, having grown from 0.8% to 1.12% of the total imports. This clearly indicates that domestic production is highly insufficient to meet the growing domestic demand, in turn fueling smuggling in the sector.

The primary reason for the rise of smuggled cigarettes into India is the high taxes. Cigarettes smuggling is a low-risk, high-reward criminal activity because high taxes on cigarettes induce great financial incentive for smugglers to earn huge profits. Persistently increasing taxes on cigarettes provide a lucrative opportunity for tax evasion due to tax arbitrage between the country of exports and in the importing country.


Mr. Najib Shah, Chairman, Central Board of Excise and Customs (CBEC) stated that illegal trade is a growing menace and the need of the hour is collaboration among stakeholders to tackle it. Growth of illicit trade through e-commerce is a new challenge, which also needs urgent attention. Unchecked, it will continue to multiply. We also need to lay equal emphasis on the rights of legitimate businesses, which are greatly impacted by illegal trade.

Mr. Anil Rajput, Chairman FICCI CASCADE in his welcome address stated that Illicit trade remains a formidable adversary for the nation.  The root cause of this is sometimes a policy framework that incentivises unscrupulous elements to take advantage and make inroads in the system. This encourages anti-social elements to dictate terms to the supply chain and create havoc for the public at large.

The international conference highlighted and deliberated on issues such as Implications of Illicit Cross Border Trade on the global economy, Strengthening Border Management System for effective enforcement and An interdisciplinary approach to sharing market intelligence on illicit cross border trade. The deliberations explored the socio economic consequences of cross border illicit trade and the policies needed to deter this activity. The discussions contributed to an integrated vision of national security and public safety, providing an interdisciplinary dialogue which will attract industry regulators, customs authorities, law enforcement, major producers of consumer goods, consumer associations and NGOs. With an underlying objective to deepen understanding of illicit trading activities across borders, effective strategies to dismantle such illegal business practices by the public and private sectors were sought.

India has a committed border protection force plus enforcement agencies that is not only safeguarding the long national borders against trans-border criminals including smugglers and terrorists but also ensures prevention of smuggling and enforcement of anti-smuggling & anti-counterfeiting laws. FICCI CASCADE acknowledges the efforts put in by the officers who show high standards of rigour and intelligence in prevention of smuggling and administration of related matters which impact Indian business and economy. To encourage and acknowledge the work of our law enforcement agencies FICCI CASCADE also felicitated the best performing officers for the period 2015-16. The winners were as follows:
1.     Mr. A K Parayil, Deputy Inspector General- Commanding Officer, Indian Coast Guard Ship Sangram
2.     Mr. S. N. Dubey, Deputy Commandant, FGT, Ferozpur, Border Security Force, Ministry of Home Affairs
3.     Mr. Dinesh Kumar, Deputy Commandant, BIAAT (Dehradun), Border Security Force, Ministry of Home Affairs
4.     Mr. S Sathianarayanan, Deputy Commissioner, Chennai III Customs
5.     Ms. Mandeep Sangha, Deputy Director, Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI), New Delhi
6.     Mr. Yogendra Kumar, Sub Inspector, Economic Offences Wing, Delhi Police
Mr. Arun Chawla, Assistant Secretary General, FICCI, proposed the vote of thanks.