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"There is a need to look
into extending Goods and Service Tax (proposed) exemptions to critical medical
devices with a process of revisiting every year to accommodate technology
advancement and changing disease patterns," the chamber said.
The GST would subsumes various duties like service tax and excise duty. Ficci
said the country may lose Rs 10 lakh crore, a fifth of its current GDP, between
2015-25.
Non-communicable heart disease, stroke and diabetes is expected to double in the
30-year period from 29 per cent in 1990 to 57 per cent in 2020, it said.
The Indian medical device industry characterised by over 60 per cent import is
stifled due to fiscal anomalies.
on May 27, the tariff structure is such that the duty on components and raw
material is higher than a finished product for devices such as Stent and
Coronary systems, it said.
Medical devices equip health care providers with tools to perform their
functions and are considered to be crucial for the services offered in
prevention, diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation of disease.
Ficci said that healthcare sector is one of the large and fast growing sectors
in India with an annual turnover of Rs 1,71,000 crore with 10-12 per cent annual
growth rate.
Source: The NDTV.com, India, dated
27/05/2010
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