Restraint on anti-dumping duties costing India dear: Report

A new study said rejection of DGTR-recommended anti-dumping duties could lead to annual losses of Rs 11,938 crore for domestic industry and put Rs 27,427 crore of planned investments at risk.

A new study said rejection of DGTR-recommended anti-dumping duties could lead to annual losses of Rs 11,938 crore for domestic industry and put Rs 27,427 crore of planned investments at risk.

Increasing reluctance by the government to go ahead with imposition of anti-dumping duties despite investigation by Directorate General of Trade Remedies (DGTR) is costing India dear in terms of elevated imports and threat to future investments, according to a study.

Between November 2025 and April 2026 the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs and Finance Ministry have rejected 81% of the cases where GGTR had recommended anti-dumping duties, which is much higher than 16% in April 2025 and November 2025, the report by C-DEP Research and Center for WTO Studies, Ministry of Commerce said Tuesday. In 2024-25 the rejection rate was 6%.

Historically India has implemented nearly 99.5% of DGTR’s anti-dumping duty recommendations until 2020. Post 2020 rejection and non-implementation rates have risen During the same period, imports from China increased significantly across several industrial sectors.

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The non-implementation of anti-dumping duties on 56 DGTR-recommended products has resulted in an annual economic loss of Rs 11,938 crore to the domestic industry. Whereas, imposition of DGTR-recommended anti-dumping duty could additionally generate approximately Rs 28,540 crore (USD 3 billion) in annual foreign exchange savings by enabling domestic manufacturers to meet domestic demand instead of imports.

Due to non-implementation of anti-dumping duties Rs 27,427 crore of committed investments in sectors like steel, chemicals, textiles and allied sectors covering 27 products is threatened.

The imposition of anti-dumping duties is a World Trade Organisation (WTO) compliant measure and India has been a responsible user of it. 

WTO data show that India’s average anti-dumping duty duration, across the case set reviewed, is 6.97 years, against a global average of 11.19 years. The US and Japan maintain longer durations and undertake more frequent sunset review renewals. 

India’s average anti-dumping duties typically fall in the 5–12% range while the US frequently imposed triple-digit anti-dumping duty rates and China imposed several high duties, including rates above 100%.

The report said despite the threat of inflation cited for restraint on anti-dumping duty imposition, the evidence of this is thin. Most of the anti-dumping duties have been recommended on intermediate goods whose impact on final prices – especially headline inflation numbers is minimal.

TOPICSECONOMYFinance MinistryThis article was first uploaded on May twenty-six, twenty twenty-six, at thirty-one minutes past seven in the evening.

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