Textile Industry Urges Removal of 11% Cotton Import Duty to Boost Competitiveness

India's textile industry has urgently requested the removal of the 11% import duty on cotton, warning it increases raw material costs and hurts competitiveness. Domestic cotton prices have surpassed international prices for four to five years, affecting exports and investment. The industry's capacity utilization stands at only 75-80%, with many mills operating idle capacity. The government's recent approval of the Rs 5,659 crore Cotton Mission is seen as a positive step to boost productivity and quality.

Key Points: Textile Sector Seeks Urgent Removal of 11% Cotton Import Duty

  • Industry seeks urgent removal of 11% cotton import duty
  • Domestic cotton prices exceed international prices for 4-5 years
  • Capacity utilization at only 75-80% with idle mills
  • Government's Rs 5,659 crore Cotton Mission welcomed
4 min read

Textile industry seeks urgent removal of 11% cotton import duty: Gherzi's Navdeep Sodhi

India's textile industry calls for removal of 11% cotton import duty, citing rising domestic prices, falling productivity, and export competitiveness issues.

"We have identified the short-term issue that is the 11 per cent import duty on cotton because that is increasing the cost of raw material for our industry. - Navdeep S Sodhi"

New Delhi, May 7

India's textile industry has sought the removal of the 11 per cent import duty on cotton, warning that rising domestic cotton prices and falling productivity are hurting the competitiveness of the sector, according to a Gherzi-ICAC study released by the Confederation of Indian Textile Industry.

Speaking on the findings of the study, Navdeep S Sodhi, Partner at Gherzi Textile Organisation, said the import duty has emerged as a major short-term challenge for the textile industry.

"We have identified the short-term issue that is the 11 per cent import duty on cotton because that is increasing the cost of raw material for our industry. So that issue needs to be addressed with urgency," Sodhi told ANI.

He further said the domestic textile industry has been facing a widening demand-supply gap and rising pressure on costs over the last few years.

"To meet the requirement of the industry, we will need to bridge the demand-supply gap, and our domestic production of cotton needs to be increased to meet the increased demand," Sodhi said.

Highlighting one of the key concerns flagged in the study, he said domestic cotton prices have remained above international prices over the past four to five years, affecting India's export competitiveness.

"Our domestic prices have been growing and rising above the international prices. So that gap has affected the competitiveness of our industry," he said.

According to Sodhi, the impact of the price disparity and supply gap is visible across exports, investments and employment in the textile sector. He noted that capacity utilisation in the industry currently stands at only 75-80 per cent, with many spinning and textile mills operating with idle capacity.

"Our exports of cotton textiles have been stagnant in the last few years," he said, adding that shrinking profitability has also slowed fresh investments in the sector. "Their margins have gone down significantly, so their surpluses for investment have contracted."

The study also highlighted the impact of declining cotton productivity on farmers' income. Sodhi said cotton productivity has fallen by nearly 20 per cent, affecting farm earnings and pushing several farmers to shift towards other crops.

"Because the productivity has gone down by about 20 per cent, the farmers' incomes have been affected," he said.

The industry body also welcomed the Union Cabinet's recent approval of the Rs 5,659 crore Cotton Mission aimed at boosting productivity and improving cotton quality.

"The government took a big decision this week to announce this cotton productivity mission and we believe that this is the decision in the right direction," Sodhi said.

He added that improving cotton quality, quantity and productivity would strengthen the competitiveness of the entire textile value chain. "There will be a lot of focus on research and development, on more disease-resistant varieties of cotton and also varieties of cotton which are more climate resistant," he said.

He also called for easier and cheaper financing for the textile industry, particularly MSMEs, and a stable cotton supply through agencies such as the Cotton Corporation of India.

Commenting on the impact of the ongoing West Asia crisis, Sodhi said the textile sector is facing pressure from rising raw material costs, logistics expenses and weakening global demand.

"The derivatives of crude oil, such as the derivatives that go into the making of synthetic fibres like PTA [Purified Terephthalic Acid], Naphtha and so on, they have all more than doubled," he said.

He added that fertiliser prices have nearly doubled during the period, increasing cotton production costs, while freight and insurance expenses have also risen sharply.

"The companies have to pay more on insurance, on freight and so on," Sodhi said.

According to him, inflationary pressures arising from the conflict could also weaken consumer demand globally. "The WTO has reduced the growth forecast for trade to a very low level. So it will have an impact on the supply side as well as on the demand side," he said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Ananya R
Good to see the government finally acknowledging the crisis with the Cotton Mission. But implementing policies on ground is always the challenge. The MSME textile units in my hometown are struggling with idle capacity and no bank is giving them easy loans. If we don't act fast, we'll lose our competitive edge permanently. 😔
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Sarah B
As someone who works in global textile sourcing, I can tell you India's potential is huge but these policy missteps are costing real business. The duty removal seems like a no-brainer if you want to boost exports. But I wonder if the farmers will get adequate support in the transition—productivity has dropped 20%, that's alarming.
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Vikram M
The West Asia crisis impact on synthetic fibre costs is another hidden challenge. PTA prices have doubled? That's huge! We're getting squeezed from both ends—natural and synthetic raw materials. The government should look at this holistically, not just cotton. Our textile industry needs a comprehensive revival package, not piecemeal solutions. 💪
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Priya S
Honestly, I feel for the small farmers. Cotton productivity down 20% means their incomes are hit hard. While big mills can absorb some shock, the smallholders have no cushion. The disease-resistant cotton varieties mentioned in the study could be a game-changer, but R&D takes time. Need to support farmers in the interim with better MSP and crop insurance. 🌾
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Arjun K
I'm sceptical about simply removing import duty. Won't that hurt domestic cotton growers? The real solution is boosting productivity through better seeds and irrigation, not making us dependent on imports. The Cotton Mission should focus on

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