Source: www. worldfootwear. com
To give boost to the sector, which employs around 2.5 million, the Centre also relaxed the employment days criteria to avail of tax deduction from 240 days to 150 days in a year. With additional 30 per cent income tax deduction in the leather and footwear sector for new employees. Also, extension of the 25 per cent reduced corporate tax to units having annual turnover up to Rs 2.5 billion will benefit the leather and footwear industry, as 90 per cent if it is in this segment.
The domestic footwear market is estimated to be around $5 billion; footwear production is estimated to be around 2.06 billion pairs a year. Per capita footwear consumption is 2.3 pairs per person and this will grow up — the domestic footwear market is projected to grow at a compounded annual rate (CAGR) of 15 per cent.
Export of leather footwear from India rose from Rs 139.3 billion in 2014-15 to Rs 143.3 bn in 2016-17. Of non-leather footwear from Rs 18.7 bn in 2014-15 to Rs 22.8 bn in 2016-17. The segment saw a CAGR of nearly 10.3 per cent. Slated to rise, with companies expected to look at sourcing from India to cater for other markets.
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In the mass segment, due to its high scale of production and variety, China continues to dominate. The mass segment is around half of the overall market.
Harkirat Singh, managing director of the Aero Group that owns the Woods and Woodlands brands, welcomes the Customs duty hike, which he says would curtail cheaper Chinese import. However, he says, companies like his would be hit by the additional five per cent duty on components. Around 25 per cent of the components are being imported for Aero.
N Mohan, director-footwear at Future Group, says if the industry does not gear up with large-scale factories and focus on upgrading of systems and processes, import will increase. Most of the import is non-leather, he adds, with the average import price at $2-3 per pair. So, additional duty will not make a big impact. “We cannot ignore this space. We need to improve efficiency and productivity,” he observed.
Skill development, emphasis on design and work methods, and availability of raw material all need to be addressed, he says. The industry should focus on the emerging domestic market.
Export organisations need to lead from the front and form a strong base for the home market. “We should encourage the non-leather segment and create support industries," said Mohan. There is, he says, over-dependence of export to Europe; the industry needs to switch some attention to the market in America.
From the government side, improvement in 'ease of doing business', investor-friendly schemes and easing of labour laws are required to attract foreign companies to invest.