RODTEP rates cut

Here is the complete UPSC study note:


RoDTEP Rates Cut — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
Pre-2021 MEIS (Merchandise Exports from India Scheme) provided export incentives; challenged at WTO by the US as violating SCM Agreement.
2019 WTO Dispute Panel ruled against India's export subsidy programmes (including MEIS).
1 Jan 2021 RoDTEP launched as WTO-compliant replacement — remission of embedded taxes rather than an export subsidy. [S6][S7]
2021–25 Scheme extended periodically; rates notified HS-code-wise in Appendix 4R (general) and Appendix 4RE (EOU/SEZ). [S3]
Aug 2021 Rates formally notified for ~8,555 tariff lines.
2023 SEZs and EOUs brought under RoDTEP coverage.
Feb–Mar 2026 Rates cut to 50% → corrigendum exempting agri/food → restoration for 23 Feb–31 Mar 2026 period. [S1][S2][S4][S5]

Predecessor: MEIS (challenged at WTO); earlier remission scheme: Duty Drawback, ROSL (Rebate of State and Central Levies).


4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Administrative / Governance

Legal / Constitutional

Geopolitical / Strategic

Historical


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. RoDTEP stands for Remission of Duties and Taxes on Exported Products.
  2. RoDTEP was launched on 1 January 2021, replacing the MEIS scheme.
  3. Implementing ministry: Ministry of Commerce and Industry via DGFT.
  4. Benefits are issued as transferable electronic duty credit scrips (e-scrips) usable against Basic Customs Duty.
  5. Rate schedule is notified HS-code-wise in Appendix 4R (general) and Appendix 4RE (EOU/SEZ).
  6. DGFT Notification No. 60/2025-26 (23 February 2026) cut RoDTEP rates to 50% of notified levels with immediate effect.
  7. The corrigendum of 24 February 2026 exempted ITC HS Chapters 01–24 (agri and food products) from the 50% cut.
  8. Full rates were restored for exports during 23 February – 31 March 2026 via Notification No. 66/2025-26 dated 23 March 2026.
  9. RoDTEP is designed to be WTO-compliant under the SCM Agreement — classified as remission, not subsidy.
  10. MEIS, the predecessor scheme, was challenged at WTO under DS541 dispute by the United States.
  11. Embedded taxes covered by RoDTEP include mandi tax, VAT on fuel, coal cess, electricity duty — levies not refunded under GST or Duty Drawback.
  12. The scheme is enabled under the Foreign Trade (Development and Regulation) Act, 1992.
  13. RoDTEP was extended with existing (full) rates through 30 September 2026.
  14. RoDTEP scrips are freely transferable and can be used to pay Basic Customs Duty on imports.
  15. SEZs and EOUs were brought under RoDTEP coverage in 2023.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Indian Economy: Effects of liberalisation; Export promotion; WTO and India
GS-II Government Policies and Interventions; International Trade Agreements
GS-II Role of DGFT and regulatory bodies

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The RoDTEP scheme represents India's attempt to balance export competitiveness with WTO obligations. Critically examine the implications of the 2026 rate rationalisation on India's export sector." (GS-III, 15 marks)

  2. "Discuss the evolution of India's export incentive framework from MEIS to RoDTEP. How does the RoDTEP scheme navigate the WTO Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures?" (GS-III, 15 marks)

  3. "Evaluate the role of the Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) in India's foreign trade policy framework, with reference to recent policy adjustments in the RoDTEP scheme." (GS-II, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
WTO SCM Agreement Legal basis distinguishing permissible remission from prohibited export subsidies — core rationale for RoDTEP design.
Foreign Trade Policy 2023 Parent policy document under which RoDTEP rates are notified; links to overall export strategy.
Duty Drawback Scheme Predecessor/parallel mechanism for remission of customs duties; often confused with RoDTEP in MCQs.
MEIS (Merchandise Exports from India Scheme) WTO-challenged predecessor; understanding its flaws clarifies why RoDTEP took a remission-only approach.
SEZs and Export-Oriented Units (EOUs) Key beneficiary categories; policy treatment under RoDTEP vs. other incentive schemes.
India's Export Targets & Merchandise Trade Contextualises fiscal pressure that drove the rate cut; links to current account deficit management.
GST Refund Mechanism for Exporters Complementary refund channel; understanding what RoDTEP covers that GST does not refund is a frequent exam trap.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. RoDTEP ≠ Duty Drawback: Duty Drawback refunds customs/central excise on inputs; RoDTEP remits embedded state and local taxes (mandi tax, VAT on fuel, electricity duty) not covered elsewhere. Confusing the two is a classic MCQ trap.

  2. RoDTEP ≠ MEIS: MEIS was an incentive (percentage of FOB value as scrip, regardless of actual tax paid) — WTO-non-compliant. RoDTEP is strictly a remission of actual embedded taxes — a critical legal distinction.

  3. Ministry confusion: RoDTEP is administered by DGFT under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, not the Finance Ministry (which handles Duty Drawback) — aspirants often mix these.

  4. Scope of Feb 2026 cut: The cut applied to all HS lines except Chapters 01–24 (agri/food). Aspirants may miss the agricultural exemption via corrigendum and assume the cut was universal.

  5. Restoration vs. Extension misread: The March 2026 notification restored rates for the 23 Feb–31 Mar 2026 period retrospectively — it did not simply "extend" the scheme. The subsequent extension through September 2026 is a separate notification — conflating these two events will cost marks.


11. Sources