Rubbermark concerned over bid to stop subsidy for rubber export
By James Paul | 30 Oct 2003
Kochi: The Kerala State Cooperative Rubber Marketing Federation (Rubbermark) has voiced concern at the Automotive Tyre Manufacturers' Association (ATMA) request to stop subsidy for rubber export, remove port restrictions for import of rubber and to stop the quality inspection of the imported rubber by the Rubber Board.
Prof K K Abraham, president of the federation, which is the apex body of 38 primary rubber marketing cooperatives in the state, says the rubber growers feel it is a deliberate attempt by the tyre manufacturers to bring down the price of rubber below the Rs 30-per kg level that existed a few months ago. Now it is hovering at around Rs 55.
The demand-supply position of rubber in the country is so delicately balanced that an import of 30,000 to 50,000 tonnes can cause a crash in the price unless it is offset by an export of an equal quantity. According to Abraham, the incentive given to promote export of tyres work out to be more than 23 per cent as calculated by ATMA.
Enjoying a waiver of 16-per cent excise duty, an average of 10 per cent sales tax and liberal concessions in income tax for their exports, ATMA has no reason to complain about the loss of revenue caused by the export of rubber, he says.
In addition to the above incentives for export of finished goods, when the manufacturers import rubber against the advanced licence, the import duty of 25 per cent is waived and the states lose 12-per cent sales tax.
The federation appealed to the government for increasing the incentives for rubber export by 50 per cent. This is because about a million farmers depend on rubber for subsistence and the tyre sector has been successful in the past in manipulating the domestic rubber price to their advantage as they are more organised and wield greater influence, Abraham adds.
The domestic price of rubber will crash unless the import of rubber under the advance licence is balanced by exports. The tyre companies continue to import rubber even when the domestic price is marginally lower than the international price.
The
federation requested that inspection of imported rubber
by the Rubber Board should continue to prevent the import
of substandard rubber into the country.
Latest articles
Featured articles
Budget 2026-27 Seeks Fiscal Balance Amid Rupee Volatility and Industrial Stagnation
By Cygnus | 02 Feb 2026
India's Budget 2026-27 targets fiscal discipline with record capex as markets tumble, the rupee weakens and manufacturing struggles to regain momentum.
The Thirsty Cloud: Why 2026 Is the Year AI Bottlenecks Shift From Chips to Water
By Axel Miller | 28 Jan 2026
As AI server density surges in 2026, data centers face a new bottleneck deeper than chips — the massive water demand required for cooling next-generation infrastructure.
The New Airspace Economy: How Geopolitics Is Rewriting Aviation Costs in 2026
By Axel Miller | 22 Jan 2026
Airspace bans, sanctions and corridor risk are forcing airlines into costly detours in 2026, raising fuel burn, reducing aircraft utilisation and pushing airfares higher worldwide.
India’s Data Center Arms Race: The Battle for Power, Cooling, and AI Real Estate
By Cygnus | 22 Jan 2026
India’s data centre boom is turning into an AI arms race where power contracts, liquid cooling and fast commissioning decide the winners across Mumbai, Chennai and Hyderabad.
India’s Oil Balancing Act: Refiners Rebuild Middle East Supply Lines as Russia Flows Disrupt
By Axel Miller | 21 Jan 2026
India’s refiners are rebalancing crude sourcing as Russian imports fell to a two-year low in December 2025, lifting OPEC’s share and raising geopolitical risk concerns.
Arctic Fever: How ‘Greenland Tariff’ Politics Sparked a Global Flight to Safety
By Axel Miller | 20 Jan 2026
Greenland-linked tariff threats have injected fresh uncertainty into transatlantic trade, triggering a risk-off shift in markets and reshaping global supply chain planning.
The New Oil (Part 5): Friend-Shoring, Supply Chain Fragmentation and the Cost of Resilience
By Cygnus | 19 Jan 2026
Friend-shoring is reshaping lithium, rare earth and graphite supply chains, creating a resilience premium and new winners and losers in clean tech.
The New Oil (Part 4): Can Technology Break the Dependency?
By Cygnus | 16 Jan 2026
Can magnet recycling and rare-earth-free motors reduce global dependence on strategic minerals? Part 4 explores breakthroughs, limits and timelines.
India’s Gig Economy Reset: The End of ‘10-Minute Delivery’ Hype?
By Cygnus | 14 Jan 2026
India’s quick-commerce sector is shifting away from “10-minute delivery” hype amid worker safety concerns and rising regulation. Here’s what changes—and what doesn’t.

