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India has imposed a three-year tax on certain steel products in order to reduce imports of cheap steel.

India has imposed a three-year tax on certain steel products in order to reduce imports of cheap steel.
India has imposed a three-year tax on certain steel products in order to reduce imports of cheap steel.

According to an order from the Finance Ministry published on Tuesday, India has imposed a tariff between 11% and 12% for three years on certain steel products. The government wants to stop cheap shipments coming from China.

Locally known as the safeguard duty, the levy will be imposed in three years at a rate of 12% in the first, 11.5% in the second and 11% in third.

The measure was published in the official government gazette and excludes imports of certain developing countries. However, China, Vietnam, Nepal, and other Asian countries will be subject to the levy. The levy will not be applied to stainless steel or specialty steels.

The federal steel ministry has said repeatedly that it does not wish to see the domestic steel industry suffer due to imports at low prices and "substandard" products.

In April, the government implemented a 200-day temporary tariff of 12 percent.

The Directorate General of Trade Remedies recommended a three-year duty, after finding that "recently, suddenly, sharp and significant increases in imports" were causing or threatening to cause a serious injury to the domestic industry.

U.S. President Donald Trump's steel import tariffs have sparked a wave of trade friction over Chinese Steel, with countries such as South Korea and Vietnam imposing?anti-dumping levies this year. (Reporting and writing by Rajveer Pardesi, Bengaluru. Editing by Joe Bavier.

(source: Reuters)