Unchain me
An industry transforms to higher levels, when there are subtle changes in the prevalent basic belief systems. It takes time - some times prolonged periods, for the decaying collective belief systems to look up. Little changes lead to gigantic strides. When we look at the Indian IT industry today with pride, we see those subtle changes from a handful of Indians in the
Indian shipping industry on the other hand started developing contrary belief systems. With the fall of Scindia and many other Indian shipping companies, there set in a general diffidence that still smothers us down. Most of us fully understand the reasons of our bureaucratic processes & misplaced tax systems scuttling our cyclic shipping industry. Even today the changes introduced are far too cosmetic and out of time. No one complains. Its despondency & a decaying belief system.
Indians have the reputation of being good in global shipping for a long time. They are the brains behind many of the global players.
Capt PS Rath
CEO, Econship Pte Ltd
(I shall be glad to have your views on psrath@gmail.com)
Article No 2
The Largesse Of Reverse Tango:
The know-how, the skills at a fraction of global price, the demand, the attitude, and the strong will to excel are the basics of shipping industry. They are in bountiful in our country. What stop us are our Tax laws and intrusive shipping policies.
Taxes are important. No doubt, government needs more taxes to fill its budget deficits. However, it needs to think on how to increase the tax basket and the collections. Tax is an extremely powerful & potent weapon. This can make or break an industry. Fortunately for us, most of our industries are being happily nurtured with a series of healthy tax initiatives. And, unfortunately our shipping industry is being constantly bludgeoned under its hammer.
Every industry is peculiar in its needs and deliverables. So is our shipping. Shipping is an industry that can hardly be contained to any country's boundaries. Ships can be sold and purchased while being in neutral territories. The shipping revenues can be paid or received in any place of choice. The smart ship owner can shift his operational or financial centre to any place he likes. The result is that most ships have ghost offices in
As a populous and developing nation we have a huge need for shipping services. We are buying this with immense outflow of hard currencies. At the same time, our export of this service is far too insignificant. Net result is a massive outflow of hard currency and Indian shipping being labelled as a sick child in comparison to other industries in
Let's see, what our taxation does. It penalises export of Indian shipping services & encourages import from outside. If you are a ship-owner, you need to pay service tax on your hire earnings, income tax or tonnage tax with lot of strings attached, import duties, VAT, tax burden of the Indian seafarers and so on. However, if you bareboat your ship, you shall be exempt from service tax. Similar is the case if you own containers. If you buy your shipping service from outside, the case is simple. You pay in foreign exchange. The Foreign Service provider is not taxed.
What needs to be done is to reverse the tax system in Indian shipping. Importation of foreign shipping services needs to be taxed to bring in government revenues, amounting to same as the government is getting by taxing Indian shipping today. Any shipping service by an Indian entity should be treated as pure export. Instead of taxing, export subsidy needs to be provided. Even shipping service provided by a domestic shipping entity for domestic movement of cargo should be treated as deemed export and similar export incentives should be awarded. This is perfectly in line with our current policy of pushing exports. This way the government would be an enabler rather than an intruder. The country would no longer need a Draconian Cabotage law like Joan's Act of USA. Instead of spending hard currency, we would earn them. This policy shall broaden the tax basket and even deepen it. FDIs would pour in to Indian shipping. Lots of jobs shall be created in
Capt PS Rath
CEO, Econship Pte Ltd
(I shall be glad to have your views on psrath@gmail.com)
Article No 3
The Silent Cow:
Imagine a world, where 30% of ships are registered in
These may sound like today's romantic fantasies. However, in the deepest recesses of our suppressed psyche, they are our uninhibited aspirations, endowed with the brains and grains of shipping. What prevents the miracle? The answer lies partly in - what we were, where we are, and the confusions of where we want to be in another five years, ten years, and twenty years from today. We need some one to understand our tortuous past and define where we stand today. We need some one to articulate our future and lay the road-map. We need the likes of a Manmohan Singh, Nitish Kumar, or Narendra Modi to be at the helm of our industry - for some time at least. Even though we have a dedicated Shipping Ministry, we have not had the good fortune to have a Minister worth his salt. It's not surprising that the fringe elements of politics and bureaucracy get the portfolio of shipping. They behave even more peripherally by engaging themselves in inconsequential and arcane issues like Sethusamudram or inaugurating new deliveries for SCI in a competing country like
We need the sparks from a good leader to ignite the process - the process of treating shipping as export of services. And bring in hard currency, rather than buy shipping services with hard currency. Create opportunities and jobs. With healthy central policies in place to fight for more exports and growth, all we need is a roaring tiger - not a silent cow.
Capt PS Rath
CEO, Econship Pte Ltd
(I shall be glad to have your views on psrath@gmail.com)
Article No 4
Take Back What Was Taken From Us:
Can we architect a strong national shipping like
"The Government tariff policy deliberately discouraged Indian ship-owning since , from 1812, the general import duty on goods brought into the country in Indian ships was raised to 15% as against 7 ½ % in the case of British ships." Radhe Shyam Rungta in 'The Rise Of Indian Business Corporation In
The Scindia Steam Navigation Company Ltd was set up in 1919 to benefit from the after-war demands of Word War I. The British laws scuttled all hopes. In 1923 the company signed a ten-year agreement with Lord Inchcape of P&O and
It's high time to change our policies of penalising Indian ship owning and rewarding foreign shipping. Protections by Cabotage, strengthening of Unions, and myopic policy tinkering like tonnage tax, though intended to help the industry were in fact too & little too late to have any desired effect. The shades of colonial policies continue to stunt any progress. The realities are the flags of convenience with practically no taxes, massive subsidies being doled out to ship buildings and ship-owning by the governments in China & South Korea, off-shoring of ship registrations, tax holidays to shipping companies by some governments, & loose implementation of IMO rules and regulations by governments and classification societies etc. In such a situation, shipping industry can not be compared with any other service exporting industry in
Article 5
Corruption & Indian Shipping:
"Corruption in
From an economic stand point, there is scarce any difference between corruption and tax. The fact that tax goes to the Government and the corruption to its representatives, largely due to the Government's own or collective ineptitude, doest not alter the economic truth. As long as corruption is predictable (as is tax), it distorts the market in a positive or negative way, as does the tax. When corruption becomes unpredictably extortionate, the market is slaughtered. That's exactly how it differs from legitimate tax and needs to be understood.
Indian shipping industry is plagued with insensible tax and corruption, squatting on insensitivity to the industry's health, from times immemorial (The Arab middlemen, The Marathas, The Portuguese, The Moguls, The British, and most ashamedly the Government of free
The predictable elements are in fact quite benign in economic terms, though not to be condoned as a way of our lives. We pay Rs 50/ or thereabouts per shipping bill endorsement, IGM filing, TP endorsement, Bond cancellation, Rs 1000/ to Rs 10000/ per Income Tax clearance per vessel call and similar amounts on all contact points with the customs, port, Income Tax and other government departments. These are just a few examples, as the list is really a long one. They are more or less predictable in nature. You may add a certain percentage as brokerage for the middlemen if you have to us them. Everyone does not have direct access to the government officer who collects the bribe. So middlemen are necessary. If you add up the small sums at all points of contact with the government agencies, it amounts to a tidy sum albeit a predictable fixed cost. Business can be planned because the amounts are known. In addition, there is certainty of availing these facilities, because there are many middlemen vying to be of service at a competitive price. It's almost a free market. There is no virtual barrier to new entrepreneurs. The system is efficient and tends to stay rigid to new changes or ideas. Unfortunately, this is where it is most visible. There is constant attack from media, western vested interests, and at times from the economy for short-term gains. The result is that this segment gets bludgeoned into being more behind the curtain or less free to market. The length and depth of middlemen increases from both the end-users and the government. As an example, we have DRI to police the customs and smaller middlemen in large numbers converge to a single node to pass the money. Computerisation of approvals are attempted to shorten the distance between the user and government agency. Since the implementation is done by the interested parties, the new contact points go remote from the contact points. All these add to the quantum of money, insidiously thwarting growth. In my views, this aspect of the corruption regime should be left free and fair to the market. This will cut the quantum and encourage business
The element of the Unpredictable Corruption needs to be brought into focus and actioned to eliminate market inefficiency. As an example if you want to change registration of a ship from
Capt PS Rath
CEO, Econship Pte Ltd
(I shall be glad to have your views on psrath@gmail.com)
Alchemy of Indian Shipping
Article No 6
The Green Seductress and the Red Monster:
The TVs, the radio, and the Newspapers were trying to out-scream each other to observe Earth Hour by switching off lights.
We need to have a Red Day to rally against this Red Tape that keeps wasting us from within, rather than running gung ho over the Green Enchantress of the fossil guzzling SUVs of the
- Remote & fuzzy admission of market reality through committee reports or internal dossiers, those hide more and reveal less.
- Ostensible policy measures not addressing the reality, but addressing populism.
- Pretentious rules and regulations supporting various narrow interest groups in the guise of congruence with Policy.
- Diverting attention or placing the blames on outside elements for the failures. Validating forcefully through committee reports when required.
- A state of denial. Comparisons with self in a typical solipsistic bent of mind, while ignoring the outside changes.
Our system of imperial bureaucracy muddles with the facts that our country has the best possible elements to house the world shipping. It taxes our industry punitively in the name of generic tax system, when