"In the past we used to have better incentive of duty drawbacks which have been substantially reduced when all the schemes were homologated into one scheme. The automotive industry is really suffered from this," Srinivasan said at the Board of Trade meeting here.
He said important markets like Bangladesh and Sri Lanka have been excluded from the incentive.
"I think those are really big markets for us, Africa is a big market and they are all suffering from lack of forex because of the commodity crash. Therefore we do need help," Srinivasan said.
"We would give them all the freedom they want to invest and compete here but we should be careful on reducing the rates which will mean that there will be non-value added exports to us," he said.
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Last year, the government had raised duty refund rates on a host of items, including iron, steel, garments and marine products with a view to promoting exports which are on a decline for the past 11 months.
The 16-member bloc RCEP comprises 10 ASEAN members (Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Singapore, Thailand, the Philippines, Laos and Vietnam) and their six free trade agreement partners -- India, China, Japan, Korea, Australia and New Zealand.
Reliance Industries' ED and Member of Board Nikhil Meswani too suggested steps to boost exports.
"The reason is that our several lopsided policy
structures that need to be focused and put into perspective in order to encourage value addition. If these are corrected textile industry can alone export over USD 100 billion worth of goods from India creating more than 20 lakh jobs and this can be done virtually by no revenue loss to the government," he said.
The 70-member BOT includes senior officials from various ministries, industry chambers and corporates including ICICI Bank Ltd MD and CEO Chanda Kochhar, Biocon MD Kiran Majumdar-Shaw, Dr Reddy's MD Satish Reddy,