Millennium Post (Kolkata)

Changes in procuremen­t norms: Imported items sourced locally excluded from local content calculatio­n

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Imported items sourced from local suppliers and royalties, technical charges paid out of India as well as supply of repackaged or refurbishe­d goods will be excluded from the calculatio­n of local content, an official said.

These changes are included in the modified public procuremen­t norms with an objective of giving maximum preference to companies that use higher levels of local content in their products.

The government prefers made in India goods in their purchases, which run into lakhs of crores of rupees every year.

Major preference in government purchases is given to companies whose goods and services have 50 per cent or more local content, a move aimed at promoting ‘Make in India’ and making the country self-reliant. The Public Procuremen­t (Preference to Make in India), Order 2017, has introduced a concept of ClassI, II and non-local suppliers, based on which they will get preference in government purchases of goods and services.

Making modificati­ons to the definition of ‘local content’, the DPIIT has revised the 2017 order, the official said.

“Imported items sourced locally from resellers/distributo­rs, license fees/royalties paid/ technical charges paid out of India, procuremen­t/supply of repackaged/refurbishe­d/ rebranded, shall be excluded from the calculatio­n of local content,” the order said.

It also said that the procuring entities will have to obtain from bidders, the cost of such locally-sourced imported items (inclusive of taxes) along with break-up on license/royalties paid/technical expertise cost sourced from outside India.

OEM (original equipment manufactur­er) certificat­es for country of origin have to be provided for the items sold by the bidder as resellers, it said.

It added that this will also address the concerns of the stakeholde­rs regarding import of refurbishe­d/rebranded/ repackaged goods and services being shown as Make in India and also being included in the local content calculatio­n for becoming Class-I local supplier.

“For contract involving supply of multiple items, the weighted average of all items has to be taken while calculatin­g the local content,” the official added.

The order also states that a penalty of up to 10 per cent of the contract value may be imposed in case the contractor/ supplier does not meet the stipulated local content requiremen­t and the category of the supplier changes from Class-I to Class-II/ Non-local or from Class-II to Non-local.

It further said that the makers manufactur­ing an item under PLI (production linked incentive) scheme shall be treated as deemed Class II local suppliers for that item unless they have minimum local content equal to or higher than that notified for Class-I local suppliers for that item for the specified period.

Class-I local suppliers get the most preference in all government purchases because their domestic value addition is 50 per cent or more.

They are followed by ClassII suppliers, whose value addition range is more than 20 per cent but less than 50 per cent.

Class-I local supplier means a supplier or service provider, whose goods, services or works offered for procuremen­t, has local content equal to or more than 50 per cent.

The govt prefers made in India goods in their purchases, which run into lakhs of crores of rupees every year

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