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Those above them include various HS codes of fuel (diesel, aviation and motor gasoline) and of course diamonds (cut or polished or otherwise other than industrial use).
According to data released by the Ministry of Commerce which has been analysed by the Indian Cellular & Electronics Association of India (ICEA), exports of smartphones (not feature phones which have a different HS code) have nearly doubled hitting Rs 88,726 crore in FY23 over Rs 45,000 crore in FY22 (when smartphones were represented in three HS codes).
In FY22, according to ICEA, smartphone exports were at Rs 45,000 crore or US $ 5.7 billion putting them in the ninth position in the pecking order.
Apple Inc of course has played a key role in upping the rank as it accounted for half of the value of exports followed by Samsung in FY23. By FY26, it hopes to shift 25 per cent of its production capacity from China to India which is equivalent to US $ 20 billion.
However, the import intensity of exports of smartphones still remains high with value addition ranging from 12 per cent to 18 per cent only. But the production-linked incentive scheme, by offering financial incentives to eligible players, hopes this would go up to 40 per cent by FY26 or the last year of the mobile device PLI.
The top five commodities and the value of their exports
|
|
Automotive diesel fuel, confirming to standard IS 1460
304,636
Diamond (other than industrial diamond) cut or otherwise worked but not mounted or set
1,76,578
Aviation turbine fuel
138,546
Motor gasoline confirming the standard IS 2796
119,716
Smartphones
88,726
Source: Ministry of Commerce data analysed by ICEA
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