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Apple’s request for FDI rules waiver under discussion: Sitharaman

The finance ministry’s foreign investment promotion board (FIPB), which clears foreign direct investment applications, has asked the iPhone maker to sell at least 30% locally sourced goods if it wished to open shops in India.

Updated on: May 30, 2016 01:19 PM IST
Reuters | By , New Delhi
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The Indian government on Monday said it was discussing Apple Inc’s foreign direct investment application that seeks a waiver from a local sourcing rule.

Nirmala Sitharaman, India’s commerce and industry minister, on Monday said she was in talks with the finance ministry on Apple Inc’s foreign direct investment proposal that seeks a waiver from the country’s local sourcing rules. (Hindustan Times Photo)
Nirmala Sitharaman, India’s commerce and industry minister, on Monday said she was in talks with the finance ministry on Apple Inc’s foreign direct investment proposal that seeks a waiver from the country’s local sourcing rules. (Hindustan Times Photo)

Nirmala Sitharaman, commerce and industry minister in the cabinet, told reporters her ministry would discuss the issue with the finance ministry.

The finance ministry’s foreign investment promotion board (FIPB), which clears foreign direct investment applications, has asked the iPhone maker to sell at least 30% locally sourced goods if it wished to open shops in India.

Apple hopes to expand its retail presence in India, one of the world’s fastest-growing smartphone markets, at a time when sales in the United States and China have slowed.

India last year exempted foreign retailers selling “state of the art” or “cutting edge technology” from the sourcing rule, which states that 30% of the value of goods sold in a shop should be made in India.

A panel set up by Sitharaman’s ministry had favoured waiving the sourcing requirement for the U.S.-based phone-maker.

But a government official, with direct knowledge of the FIPB decision, said Apple’s request was turned down as it failed to provide any material “on record” to back it.

“(The) finance ministry has taken a different line. We will talk to them.”

The FIPB decision is a setback for Apple, whose chief executive Tim Cook met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi about a week ago. The trip was supposed to set the stage for the U.S.-based company’s expansion in India.

Sitharaman said she was not in favour of relaxing rules for Apple to sell refurbished second-hand phones in India.

 
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