A
Parliamentary panel asked the government to regulate imports of
natural rubber to protect domestic growers and arrest steep fall in
prices, reported PTI.
It
also said the imports should be need based and the quantum of imports
may be determined on the basis of the gap between the domestic
production and consumption.
"Regulate
imports of natural rubber during the peak season through designated
ports for ensuring quality check and preventing pressure on domestic
rubber price," a Rajya Sabha release said.
This
is the 119th report on rubber industry in India by the Department
Related Parliamentary Standing Committee on Commerce.
"Steep
decline in the price of natural rubber since last year calls for an
immediate intervention to arrest further price drop and unless the
necessary measures are taken, there is a possibility of growers
shifting to other crops," it added.
It
said that the quantum of subsidy for replantation is not adequate and
it needs to be reviewed and increased suitably to optimally support
replanting costs.
The
panel also suggested that the government must extend full support to
the rubber board in promoting the cultivation in left wing extremism
affected states such as Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand,
Odisha and West Bengal.
Further,
it said that there is a need for an urgent structural reforms to
address the inherent constraints of country's non-tyre sector.
"Technology
upgradation fund with a corpus of Rs 500 crore may be created for the
non-tyre rubber industry," it added.
The
Parliamentary panel asked for review of free trade agreements like
with ASEAN, Singapore, Malaysia and SAFTA so as to stop India become
dumping ground for cheap tyres at the cost of local manufacturer.
It
also asked for revisit the agricultural income tax structure on
rubber plantations as they act as a hindrance in achieving optimal
production and productivity of rubber in the country.
"The
two non-operational tyre plants - Dunlop and Tyre Corporation of
India, in case they cannot be revived, may be converted into centres
of excellence of rubber for rubber silk development," it added.
Further,
it added that more than a year has passed but the report on national
policy on rubber has not yet been formulated.
The
government should come up with the policy within three months and
"all the concerns and issues affecting the rubber sector must be
addressed and should find a place in the policy," it said.
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