Government to reexamine ‘unusual’ gold import surge amid indications of double-counting

DGCIS initiates “detailed examination” of gold import data, Reconciliation to be done with CBIC data

The Union government has begun a “detailed examination of gold import data” a day after official trade figures showed that India’s gold imports in November surged threefold to an all-time high of $14.8 billion compared to the previous year, a Commerce Ministry official said on Wednesday.

The examination comes as India’s record trade deficit of $38 billion in November pushed the rupee to an all-time low.

“Upon noticing the unusual surge, the Directorate General of Commercial Intelligence and Statistics (DGCIS) has initiated a detailed examination of the gold import data. Reconciliation will be carried out with data from the Central Board of Indirect Taxes & Customs (CBIC),” the official said. While there was no official response to queries on what could have gone wrong, a Bloomberg report said officials are likely to have double-counted gold shipments in warehouses following a change in methodology in July. Efforts are now underway to reconcile the data, which may have been overestimated by as much as 50 tonnes in November of the total imports of the precious metal.

The think tank Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI) had said that gold imports in India have risen alarmingly, driven by multiple factors, including growing investment demand, tariff reductions, and loopholes in trade agreements.

This surge has raised significant economic concerns by distorting the trade balance, weakening the rupee, and widening the current account deficit, GTRI noted.

“The reduction of import tariffs from 15 per cent to 6 per cent in the last Budget, aimed at curbing gold imports from Dubai, has further incentivised imports. At the current 6 per cent tariff, domestic gold prices are only slightly higher than global rates, making gold an attractive long-term investment,” GTRI said.

Notably, gold imports reached a staggering $14.9 billion in November 2024, accounting for 21.2 per cent of India’s total merchandise imports of $70 billion. For the first time, gold surpassed crude petroleum as India’s largest single import item. Imports surged by 331.4 per cent in November 2024 compared to November 2023. Excluding gold, India’s merchandise imports would have grown by just 6.7 per cent instead of 27.04 per cent.

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