Garment and Textile Sector Seeks Tax Breaks and Export Support for FY27 Budget
Issue: To address the severe impact of US import tariffs and global recessionary pressures, the Indian garments and textiles industry submitted pre-Budget recommendations for FY 2026-27, seeking a package of tax concessions, liquidity support, and rationalization of key export schemes.
Facts:
- The textiles and garments sector employs over 45 million people and aims to grow from $174 billion to $350 billion by 2030.
- The sector has been hit hard by US additional tariffs of 50%, making Indian exports uncompetitive against rivals like Vietnam and Bangladesh (where tariffs are around 19-20%).
- Exports of textiles, garments, and made-ups fell 37% between May and September 2025. Garments alone declined 44%.
Decision:
The industry submitted a package of tax and non-tax proposals to the Textiles Secretary during pre-budget consultations, urging the government to enhance their global competitiveness and provide immediate liquidity support.
Key TakeDowns (Industry Demands):
- Resumption of Interest Subvention: The industry made a strong pitch for the resumption of the Interest Equalisation Scheme on pre- and post-shipment rupee export credit, which had expired. This is considered essential to support the MSME segment of the apparel export industry.
- Concessional Tax Rate: They recommended reintroducing the concessional corporate tax rate of 15% (under Section 115BAB) to support the sustained growth of new manufacturing companies in the apparel industry.
- Accelerated Depreciation: Exporters proposed an accelerated depreciation allowance of 100% over two years on eligible capital assets for tax computation purposes. This would advance claims, provide a short-term liquidity advantage, and enable reinvestment in modernization without revenue loss to the government.
- IGCR Scheme Rationalization: They sought simplification of the Import of Goods at Concessional Rates of Duty (IGCR) Rules, requesting that benefits for duty-free import of trims and accessories be extended to intermediate suppliers and deemed exporters and that a minimum wastage of 10% be allowed.
Source :- The Hindu Business Line