New Delhi, India
The revenue intelligence arm of India's finance ministry stalled the export of 27,000 Vivo phones from India worth $15 million to the neighbouring countries. Guaongzhou-headquartered smartphone major has mis-declared the device models and their market values, according to Directorate of Revenue Intelligence, following which it was stopped from shipping the devices from India to markets in its vicinity such as Thailand and Gulf nations.
A Bloomberg report further quoted an industry lobby group â the India Cellular and Electronics Association (ICEA) â calling the government agencyâs actions 'unfortunate'.
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âWe request your kind and urgent intervention to stop this unfortunate course of action,â ICEA chairman Pankaj Mohindroo wrote to the finance ministry. âSuch unwarranted actions by enforcement agencies will diffuse the drive and motivation to encourage electronics manufacturing and exports from India.â
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The current export tussle comes shortly after the governmentâs increased scrutiny of Chinese companies including SAICâs MG Motor, Xiaomi, ZTE, Oppo and others.
The Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) has registered cases against 43 mobile and equipment manufacturing companies between 2019 and 2022.
Vivo exported its first batch of India-made smartphones in early November to markets such as Saudi Arabia and Thailand. But reports say that stalling of export could hurt Vivoâs future in the worldâs second-biggest smartphone market, where the company is already under scrutiny.
India, in recent years, has ramped up efforts to boost home-grown supply chains from both domestic and foreign firms alike. India expects to export electronics products worth $120 billion by the end of March 2026.
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