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Flat duty on lubricants import 'to hit farms, transports'

Tuesday, 10 July 2007


Importers have warned that the imposition of a flat duty on all grades of lubricants will throw a wrench into the business and hit agriculture and transport sectors hard, reports bdnews24.com.
The interim administration has imposed a uniform specific duty of Tk 39,000 per tonne on the categories of lubricants in the current budget.
The National Board of Revenue officials argue that the specific duty is designed to stop 'massive tax evasion' by a few importers through undervaluation of prices.
"It may be true that some importers undervalued the prices to evade tax, but the duty structure must be rational," said Faisal Mahbub, president of Oil and Lubricants Importers Association of Bangladesh (OLIAB).
Mahbub said the value-addition determined by the NBR to convert base oil to lubricants is unrealistic and it has pushed up the duty.
Base oil is an intermediary product to manufacture finished lubricants for engines. Value-addition in base oil is around 15 per cent, but the NBR has determined it at 38 per cent, he said.
The previous duty rate was 52 per cent, including 25 per cent customs duty, 15 per cent VAT, 4.0 per cent infrastructure development surcharge and 3.0 per cent advanced income tax.
The minimum value of imported mono grade lubricants is $600 to $650 per tonne, according to the Association. But NBR officials quoting international market prices said it is no less than $850.
"We've fixed the flat duty rate on the basis of the previous duty structure," a senior NBR official told the news agency, asking not to be named.
More than 100 grades of lubricants are manufactured broadly under the mono grade, multi grade, synthetic, industrial and marine, according to the Association.
Mono grade, used in irrigation pumps, tractors, trucks and country boats, constitutes 70 per cent of Bangladesh's total lubricants import.
The tax incidence for mono grade lubricants has jumped up to Tk 39,000 a tonne from around Tk 20, 000, Mahbub said.
"This surge in duty will cost the agriculture and transport sectors heavily."
He said the duty structure should not be flat as the prices of various grades of lubricants vary between Tk 0.1 million to Tk 0.6 million.
According to NBR statistics, Bangladesh has imported 21,471.79 tonnes of finished lubricants worth Tk 1.79 billion in the first 11 months of the just concluded 2006-07 fiscal year.
Base oil import for the same period was 38,188.84 tonnes worth Tk 2.26 billion.