High Testing Costs Under QCOs Risk Squeezing MSMEs, Says GTRI

0
360

The government should consider capping testing charges for routine industrial products, as the high cost of compliance with Quality Control Orders (QCOs) risks undermining India’s manufacturing ecosystem and smaller importers, the Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI) said on Tuesday.

While the QCO framework is intended to enhance product quality and ensure consumer safety, its rapid expansion is placing strain on testing infrastructure and creating significant compliance bottlenecks for micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), the think tank noted.

GTRI Founder Ajay Srivastava stated that India’s expanding quality control regime was imposing testing and certification costs so high that many MSME importers could be pushed out of business, potentially leaving the market increasingly dominated by larger players.

The costs arise primarily under the Foreign Manufacturers Certification Scheme (FMCS) of the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS), which mandates that foreign manufacturers obtain BIS certification before exporting products covered by QCOs to India. The process involves appointing an authorised Indian representative, submitting technical documentation, undergoing factory inspections by BIS, providing product samples for testing at approved laboratories, and securing a licence prior to export.

Srivastava further noted that while large importers are able to distribute such costs across higher volumes, smaller firms importing specialised or low-volume products face disproportionate financial pressure. He observed that upfront certification expenses, often ranging between Rs. 15 lakh (US $16,000) and Rs. 20 lakh (US $21,500), could render imports commercially unviable for many MSMEs.

GTRI also warned that elevated certification costs could have unintended consequences for domestic manufacturing. Srivastava pointed out that high compliance expenses risk undermining the ‘Make in India’ initiative, as many Indian manufacturers depend on imported specialised inputs, components and machinery that are not available domestically at the required quality or scale.

The think tank has urged the government to cap testing charges for routine products, recognise reports from accredited foreign laboratories, adopt risk-based testing norms in place of extensive sample requirements, and undertake regulatory impact assessments before introducing new QCOs.

Search
Categories
Read More
Fashion Media & Publications
BTMA Launches UK-India Textile Machinery Coalition, Expands Skills Initiatives
The British Textile Machinery Association (BTMA) has announced a series of initiatives in 2026,...
By Textile Value Chain 2026-05-04 08:58:47 0 858
Fashion Media & Publications
Responsive Policymaking for Trade Push
India’s textile industry finds itself at a defining juncture, shaped by a mix of strategic...
By The Indian Textile Journal 2026-03-25 07:41:20 0 376
Fashion Media & Publications
India Rejects Textile Overcapacity Claims Amid Scrutiny from US Trade Investigations
India has strongly refuted allegations of overcapacity in its textile sector, with senior trade...
By Apparel Resources 2026-06-12 09:40:17 0 366
Fashion Media & Publications
RSWM Advances Strategic Transformation Amid Textile Industry Shift
India’s textile industry is undergoing structural changes driven by global demand...
By Textile Value Chain 2026-04-24 10:27:03 0 372
Fashion Media & Publications
Gujarat Customs Begins Release of Stalled Polyester FDY Yarn Imports After High Court Order
The release of polyester fully drawn yarn (FDY) import consignments that had been held at various...
By Apparel Resources 2026-06-16 06:46:18 0 398