Export Diversification through Bonded Warehouse Reforms
Benefits and rules of bonded manufacturing are often discretionary. Bonded manufacturing is a form of temporary admission, which is equivalent to suspended import duty. The term used varies from country to country: Special Bonded Warehouses (SBW) i...
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okr-10986-305512021-05-25T09:18:54Z Export Diversification through Bonded Warehouse Reforms World Bank BONDED WAREHOUSE SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONES EXPORT PROCESSING ZONE MANUFACTURING EXPORTS EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS Benefits and rules of bonded manufacturing are often discretionary. Bonded manufacturing is a form of temporary admission, which is equivalent to suspended import duty. The term used varies from country to country: Special Bonded Warehouses (SBW) in Bangladesh, Export Only Units in India, Bonded Manufacturing Warehouses in Malaysia, etc. The rules under which they operate also vary substantially from country to country and have changed over time. Bonded manufacturing status allows firms to bring imported goods into their warehouses without paying import duty, use the goods in their production, and export the output. The firms can usually also import machinery and replacement parts and other supplies duty-free, and buy from domestic suppliers free of domestic excise, sales and other taxes. The participating factories operate under the supervision of Customs authorities, who check the import and export containers going to and from the bonded factory, or, in some cases, rely on spot checks of the factory's inventories. The benefits and rules are at the discretion of the governments. The success of the bonded warehouse facility is not equitable and inclusive in Bangladesh. Bangladesh’s customs bonded warehouse regime permits licensed manufacturers to import duty-free parts and materials required for their export production purposes. The regime is most heavily used by RMG producers and to a lesser extent by leather goods, footwear, and shipbuilding industries. Enterprises can use the Special Bonded Warehouse (SBW) facility for importing all inputs duty-free along with imports of inputs under back-to-back LC (letters of credit), a facility to pay for imported inputs from export proceeds. This policy works to negate both the effect of relatively high import tariffs and the difficulty in claiming duty drawback on the export of duty-paid imported raw materials. It ensures competitive pricing by exporters for their manufactured goods as they compete in regional (and global) markets. However, these schemes allowing the duty-free import of inputs are not available equally to other sector exporters, who must pay duties on imported inputs upfront and rely on a dysfunctional duty drawback system that involves transaction costs. Therefore, for non-RMG sectors, a tariff on imports becomes a tax on exports on two counts: (a) the higher cost of imported inputs and (b) the higher tariff-induced profitability of Import Substitute Industries that divert resources away from exports. 2018-10-11T17:22:14Z 2018-10-11T17:22:14Z 2018-09-19 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/275881537421782651/Bangladesh-Policy-Notes-Export-Diversification-through-Bonded-Warehouse-Reforms http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30551 English Bangladesh Policy Notes; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Notes Economic & Sector Work South Asia Bangladesh |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English |
topic |
BONDED WAREHOUSE SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONES EXPORT PROCESSING ZONE MANUFACTURING EXPORTS EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS |
spellingShingle |
BONDED WAREHOUSE SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONES EXPORT PROCESSING ZONE MANUFACTURING EXPORTS EXPORT COMPETITIVENESS World Bank Export Diversification through Bonded Warehouse Reforms |
geographic_facet |
South Asia Bangladesh |
relation |
Bangladesh Policy Notes; |
description |
Benefits and rules of bonded
manufacturing are often discretionary. Bonded manufacturing
is a form of temporary admission, which is equivalent to
suspended import duty. The term used varies from country to
country: Special Bonded Warehouses (SBW) in Bangladesh,
Export Only Units in India, Bonded Manufacturing Warehouses
in Malaysia, etc. The rules under which they operate also
vary substantially from country to country and have changed
over time. Bonded manufacturing status allows firms to bring
imported goods into their warehouses without paying import
duty, use the goods in their production, and export the
output. The firms can usually also import machinery and
replacement parts and other supplies duty-free, and buy from
domestic suppliers free of domestic excise, sales and other
taxes. The participating factories operate under the
supervision of Customs authorities, who check the import and
export containers going to and from the bonded factory, or,
in some cases, rely on spot checks of the factory's
inventories. The benefits and rules are at the discretion of
the governments. The success of the bonded warehouse
facility is not equitable and inclusive in Bangladesh.
Bangladesh’s customs bonded warehouse regime permits
licensed manufacturers to import duty-free parts and
materials required for their export production purposes. The
regime is most heavily used by RMG producers and to a lesser
extent by leather goods, footwear, and shipbuilding
industries. Enterprises can use the Special Bonded Warehouse
(SBW) facility for importing all inputs duty-free along with
imports of inputs under back-to-back LC (letters of credit),
a facility to pay for imported inputs from export proceeds.
This policy works to negate both the effect of relatively
high import tariffs and the difficulty in claiming duty
drawback on the export of duty-paid imported raw materials.
It ensures competitive pricing by exporters for their
manufactured goods as they compete in regional (and global)
markets. However, these schemes allowing the duty-free
import of inputs are not available equally to other sector
exporters, who must pay duties on imported inputs upfront
and rely on a dysfunctional duty drawback system that
involves transaction costs. Therefore, for non-RMG sectors,
a tariff on imports becomes a tax on exports on two counts:
(a) the higher cost of imported inputs and (b) the higher
tariff-induced profitability of Import Substitute Industries
that divert resources away from exports. |
format |
Report |
author |
World Bank |
author_facet |
World Bank |
author_sort |
World Bank |
title |
Export Diversification through Bonded Warehouse Reforms |
title_short |
Export Diversification through Bonded Warehouse Reforms |
title_full |
Export Diversification through Bonded Warehouse Reforms |
title_fullStr |
Export Diversification through Bonded Warehouse Reforms |
title_full_unstemmed |
Export Diversification through Bonded Warehouse Reforms |
title_sort |
export diversification through bonded warehouse reforms |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/275881537421782651/Bangladesh-Policy-Notes-Export-Diversification-through-Bonded-Warehouse-Reforms http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30551 |
_version_ |
1764472327597195264 |