GJEPC Submits Pre-Budget Proposals!
Further, the Council proposed flexibility for SEZs
GJEPC submitted a set of pre-budget proposals to the Government of India in New Delhi on 7th November, aimed at improving ease of doing business and boosting exports. The Council proposals were put forth by Kirit Bhansali, Chairman, GJEPC; Anoop Mehta, Convener – Diamond Panel; K. Srinivasan, Convener – Gold Panel, GJEPC; and Sabyasachi Ray, Executive Director, GJEPC.
Key proposals
include a liberalised taxation framework for rough diamond trading in Special
Notified Zones, on the lines of other international diamond trading hubs like
Israel, Dubai, Belgium, etc., and an extension of the customs duty exemption on
lab-grown diamond seeds beyond March 2026 to support India’s fast-growing LGD
industry.
GJEPC also sought retrospective applicability of the ±0.01 mm height variance parameter (2014-2025) for re-imported diamonds sent for certification/grading, ad-valorem duty drawbacks for gold and silver to reflect rising prices, and inclusion of platinum jewellery and gold articles in the drawback scheme.
To attract foreign tourists, the Council recommended a comprehensive tax refund mechanism covering GST, Basic Customs Duty, and Agriculture Infrastructure and Development Cess (AIDC), supported by digital integration and refund counters at airports.
Further, the Council proposed flexibility for SEZs to allow reverse job work, domestic sales on duty payment, and ‘Bill to, Ship to’ procurement to streamline logistics. Other suggestions included reducing import duty on cut and polished diamonds and coloured gemstones from 5% to 2.5%, abolishing duty on rough gemstones, and raising personal carriage limits for overseas exhibitions and business tours.
Highlighting
industry challenges, GJEPC urged relief from transfer pricing penalties under
Section 271G, citing razor-thin profit margins and judicial precedents
supporting the industry’s compliance approach.



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