Export processing Zones In India : Analysis of the Export

Download Report

Transcript Export processing Zones In India : Analysis of the Export

SEZs in India :A Quantitative
Assessment of Costs and
Benefits
Aradhna Aggarwal
Associate Professor
Department of Business Economics
University of Delhi
Consultant : ICRIER
[email protected]
Contents
•
•
•
•
•
The Rationale
Benefits and costs: Theoretical approaches
Net Benefits: A quantitative assessment
Benefits and costs : Qualitative analysis
Conclusion
Why SEZs?
Two approaches
Orthodox Approach ( neo classical)
Heterodox approach
(New institutional theories)
SEZs offer relaxed tax and custom
regime and offset anti-export bias in
import substituting regime
Offer good I climate in export oriented regime
tax incentives :
Modern Infrastructure
Good Governance
Location-specific advantages
Earning
foreign exchange
Promotion of EOI
EOI is promoted through…
Three channels
Domestic producers:
1.
2.
Independent producers
Insertion into GVCs
(Small firms)
Seller driven
Buyer driven
MNCs
Intra-firm trade
Clustering
Promoting manufacturing is important in India because…
• Service-sector driven growth. Employment generation potential is limited.
• The share of manufacturing remains almost constant at 16-17%.
• Evidence suggests that employment growth in the formal sector declined.
• Agriculture contributes less than 20% but over 60% people are dependent
on agriculture and allied activities.
• A case study of Faizabad : 5 families multiplied to 300 families over time,
cultivable land remains 1100 acres. No “break even” in many cases.
Villagers are looking for alternative employment opportunities.
• There is need to improve investment climate to promote manufacturing but
resources limited.
• Evidence suggests that zones can play an important role in attracting
investment and promoting exports and industrialisation.
Benefits to the economy: Theoretical approaches
•
1. Orthodox Approach (Neo classical):
• to offset anti-export bias in a heavily regulated economy :
• always welfare reducing
•
2. Cost benefit approach (accounting method) :Warr, 1989
• SEZs have both costs and benefits.
• Their contribution depends on whether measurable costs are less than measurable
benefits.
• Recognised indirect benefits in terms of income generated
• These arise from backward and forward linkages but argued that they are limited.
•
3. Heterodox approach (Johansson 1994)
• Underscored the importance of indirect effects through spillovers and
demonstrations.
• Overall effects are difficult to measure
•
Aggarwal (2007) : Spillovers also take place when
• Zones’ entrepreneurs interact with the rest of the economy entrepreneurs in
various forums.
• Zone entrepreneurs set up production units outside the zones.
Benefits : The Eclectic approach
Indirect
Direct
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Foreign exchange
Employment generation
Employment for Females
Skill Upgradation
FDI
Tech. transfers and creation
1.
2.
3.
4.
Indirect employment
Investment
Skill spillovers
Technology spillovers
1. Ind. growth
2. Productive Diversification
3. Human development
4. Revenue generation for govt.
Quantifiable : static :Foreign Ex
earnings, Net value addition, I, employ,
Dynamic : Income generation
Non quantifiable : other direct and
indirect effects
Costs
•
•
•
•
Quantifiable:
1. SEZ development cost : Not incurred by the government
2. Revenue loss (Tax and other investment incentives)
3. Operational costs
Other welfare costs : Non quantifiable
•
Resource transfer from the domestic sector to SEZs with no net
addition to economic activities ( relocation and substitution effect)
•
Land Acquisition without adequate compensation
•
Impoverishment of farmers
•
Loss of agricultural land
•
Misuse of land for real estate
•
Regional disparities
•
Unequal treatment
Net benefits
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
NNB = (EXP+DTA+TAXGAIN)-IMP-RM-ELEC-ADMIN-TAX LOSS
Where
NNB: Net benefits from SEZs
EXP : foreign exchange earnings and
DTA : Domestic Tariff area Sales
TAXGAIN: Taxes collected on DTA sales
EXP+DTA+TAXGAIN: Total benefits
•
•
•
•
•
•
IMP : imports
ELEC : the cost of public utilities (electricity, power and fuel)
RM : the cost of locally purchased inputs
TAX Direct and indirect ( only for SEZ developers) tax foregone
ADMIN: Administrative costs
IMP+ELEC+RM+TAX+ADMIN : total cost
Fundamental assumptions:
•
The proposed SEZ investment in each of the three years will be Rs. 100,000 cr.
•
The actual investment in each year will follow a three years’ time frame. In other
words, realized investment in the first year will be 50% of the proposed investment in
that year say, t. In the second (t+1) year, 30% and in the third (t+2) year , 20% of the
investment proposed in the year “t” will be realized.
•
Of the total investment, 7% is projected to occur in the FTWZ /power SEZs in each
year. The remaining will be invested in other zones.
•
The infrastructure development expenditure in new SEZs will be 60% of the total
investment in the first year. In the second and the third year it will be 30% and 10%.
•
The remaining investment termed “productive investment” is divided between the IT
sector and other sectors in the proportion of 44% in the first year, 42% in the second
year and 40% in the third year.
•
We required several other conduct and performance related ratios which are based on
the CMIE database of the export oriented sector. Data was extracted for the relevant
industries.
Projections of static benefits : 2007-2009 (Rs. Cr)
Total
infra
Cumulative
exports
Net foreign
exchange
Direct
tax liab
Indirect
tax loss
Net benefits
Employ on
account of
productive
act.
In direct
employment
2007
28479.8
30222.68
14573.6
2113.3
2178.7
7601.623
90668.05
290026.7
2008
40452.2
98535.43
52190.82
6349.5
3094.6
34009.09
295606.3
578771.7
2009
43536.0
174526.5
94265.64
10911.2
3330.5
64547.84
523579.5
828331.5
Total
112468
303284.6
161030.1
19373.9
909853.8
1697130
8603.8
106158.6
Tax losses and benefits generated as proportion of
incremental investment
Tax losses as % of
actual investment
2007
2008
2009
Average
Benefits
generated
8.58
15.20325
11.81
42.51136
14.24
64.54784
12.16
46.16
Net benefits if no additional investment after 2009
Direct tax loss
(Rs. Cr)
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Total
Indirect tax
loss (Rs.Cr)
Net
benefits
2113.3
2178.7047
7601.623
6349.5
3094.5933
34009.09
10911.1
3330.504
64547.84
8034.4
763.2405
48899.05
5911.6
138.771
39294.63
33320.0
9505.8
194352.23
Benefits under the diversion hypothesis (Rs. Crore)
Benefits net of the
IT sector benefits
Tax loss as
Total Tax
% to actual I
loss
Benefits as % (which is the
including
to actual I
same as in
the notional
Table 7)
IT sector
taxes
2007
5703.198
4291.977
11.41
8.58
2008
21707.13
9444.098
27.13
11.81
2009
40934.7
14241.67
40.93
14.24
Total
68345.03
27977.75
29.7
12.16
Dynamic gains from SEZs (Rs. Cr)
Additional
output
Corporate Indirect
Salary
total tax Employment
(No.)
Direct tax
tax
tax
Collection
collection collection collection
2007
64385.58
1287.712
5150.847
443.5265
6882.085
321927
211282.6
4225.652
16902.61
1435.528
22563.79
1056413
376643.4
7532.868
30131.47
2520.337
40184.68
1883217
2008
2009
Contribution of EPZs to Industrial growth/
diversification : A qualitative analysis
National
Contribution
to exports,
employment
Regional development
Contribution to employment,
Income generation
Ancilliary industrial activities
Most notable : SEEPZ, CSEZ, Kandla, Noida
At the sector level significant contribution to technology transfer,
spill overs and development of Local entrepreneureship : Gems
and Jewellery, Electronics, SW, rubber gloves
Human development and Poverty
Technology
Transfers,
creation. And
Spillovers limited
Skill formation : Industrial
Training, improvement in skill,
Better prospects outside.
Remunerative employment for people with low Education
level: : comparable wages and Better working conditions,
satisfaction levels are higher Living conditions improved
after joining the EPZs
SEZ Act provides a major thrust
• 1. A well balanced package of incentives, infrastructure, governance is
offered.
• Should tax incentives be offered:
• Yes, Our survey-based study shows that
• The most important ingredient in any SEZ policy is :Tax incentives
• Three reasons:
• Export obligations, attachment with GVC, no location choice.
• Second most important factor: good governance : custom rules and single
window clearance.
• Third: infrastructure : within zones: electricity and water; outside zones:
transport, roads, ports and airports
• Fourth : location. If good external infrastructure, this is not important. The
argument that they should be set up only near the ports is not sustainable.
Current status
SEZ
Status
Investment
Employment (No.)
Nokia, Tamil Nadu:
commenced commercial
production
US$ 100 Million
Direct : 2800
Indirect : 10000
Quark City, Chandigarh:
Inaugurated by the PM
$ 0.5 billion FDI*
35000* by May 2007
Flextronix in Tamilnadu
Commences operation
in November 2006
$100 million
3000*
(2500
training)
Motorola and Foxconn,
Tamilnadu
Units being set up
$200 million*
5000* by Dec. 2007
Apache SEZ (Adidas
Group), Andhra Pradesh
Construction started
$50 million*
25,000*
Divvy’s Labs, Andhra
Pradesh
Commenced operations
NA
8000* by April 2007
Rajiv Gandhi
Technology Park,
Chandigarh
Brandix Apparel SEZ,
Andhra Pradesh
Construction started
NA
5000* by June 2007
(500 under training)
$100 million*
26000* by March 2007
*Expected
Advanced
stage
construction
of
under
Recent patterns
1. Formal approvals : 234 as on May 1, 2007
2. AP : 45, Maharashtra : 47, Tamilnadu : 25, Karnataka : 29,
Haryana and Gujrat : 19 each, Kerala 10, UP 8. WB: 7,MP : 4
3. IT : 133, Electronic HW and SW : 16; 10 multi products; 12
Pharmaceuticals, 9 bio tech, over 11 textile
4. In principle approvals : 164
5. Notified as on 1st May 2007: 100
High tech industries that have come up due to SEZs:
Electronics Manufacturing Services, Semiconductor, Aerospace,
Other industries benefited : Biotech, Pharmaceutical,
automobile, textile.
Costs : A qualitative Analysis
• Relocation : Misplaced. but in the IT sector substitution effect is evident
• Land Acquisition : Needs serious research, should not be left to the private
parties.
• Loss of agricultural land : Need to create “land bank” along the lines of TN.
• Impoverishment of farmers : Needs research. But sharp rise in land prices,
Huge compensations, They must be offered specifically designed investment
plans for these funds to ensure regular incomes. This may provide them
security.
• Misuse of land for real estate : Need for exit policy and regular monitoring
• Uneven growth : misplaced
• Unequal treatment with exporters : Tax incentives to STPIs and EOUs.
• A large number of IT sector SEZs : Once STPI incentives restored, this issue
will be addressed.
Conclusion
• SEZs can act as catalyst to industrial growth provided they are implemented
effectively.
• Effective implementation of a policy that aims at giving shock to the economy
requires mobilization of public opinion. People often approach such an issue
initially with strong, emotionally laden feelings and opinions. It must be
shaped and formed so that important decisions are taken without creating
instability in the society.
• Four things are important :
• The government must slow down the process of giving approvals. This is
important not only for social or political reasons but also due to economic
realities.
• Legal institutions related to land acquisition ( including land acquisition
modalities, compensation package and rehabilitation package) must be
addressed.
• Introduce a performance based exit policy for SEZ developers
• Restore STPI and EOUs benefits
• Finally, the policy should be treated as transitory.