Special Economic Zones — Economic Framework
Economic Framework
Special Economic Zones (SEZs) are geographically demarcated areas within a country that operate under distinct economic laws, more liberal than the national laws, primarily to promote exports, attract investment, and generate employment.
India's SEZ policy evolved from the earlier Export Processing Zones (EPZs) established in 1965, culminating in the comprehensive Special Economic Zones Act, 2005, and SEZ Rules, 2006. This legal framework provides a stable and transparent environment, offering significant fiscal incentives like income tax exemptions (under Section 10AA, though phased out for new units post-2020), customs duty waivers, and simplified regulatory procedures.
Governance is overseen by a three-tier structure: the Board of Approval (BoA) at the national level, and Development Commissioners (DCs) heading Unit Approval Committees (UACs) at the zone level. SEZs are categorized into multi-product and sector-specific zones, with varying minimum area requirements (e.
g., 1000 hectares for multi-product, 100 hectares for sector-specific). While successful in boosting exports and attracting FDI, SEZs have faced challenges such as land acquisition issues, revenue implications due to tax holidays, and underutilization.
Recent policy reviews, including the proposed DESH Bill, aim to address these concerns by broadening the scope of SEZs to include domestic manufacturing and services, ensuring WTO compliance, and potentially integrating with schemes like Production Linked Incentives (PLI).
From a UPSC perspective, understanding the evolution, legal framework, incentives, challenges, and ongoing reforms of SEZs is crucial for analyzing India's industrial and trade policies.
Important Differences
vs Export Processing Zones (EPZ), Industrial Parks, Free Trade Zones (FTZ)
| Aspect | This Topic | Export Processing Zones (EPZ), Industrial Parks, Free Trade Zones (FTZ) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal Basis | SEZ Act, 2005 & Rules, 2006 (Statutory) | Policy-driven (earlier Foreign Trade Policy) for EPZs; State/Local laws for Industrial Parks; Customs Act/FTZ Regulations for FTZs |
| Objective | Broad economic growth, exports, investment, employment, infrastructure development | Primarily export promotion (EPZ); General industrial development (Industrial Park); Trade facilitation, warehousing, re-export (FTZ) |
| Fiscal Incentives | Comprehensive (Income Tax, Customs, Excise, Service Tax exemptions, etc. - though some phased out) | Limited (Customs/Excise for EPZs); Varies by state for Industrial Parks; Customs duty deferral/exemption for re-export (FTZ) |
| Regulatory Framework | Single-window clearance, simplified procedures, deemed foreign territory status for trade | Multi-window, complex procedures (EPZ); Standard domestic regulations (Industrial Park); Simplified customs for specific activities (FTZ) |
| Focus | Manufacturing and services for export, with some DTA sales allowed under duty | Manufacturing for export (EPZ); Domestic manufacturing (Industrial Park); Trade, logistics, value-added services (FTZ) |
| Infrastructure | Mandatory world-class infrastructure by developer | Basic infrastructure (EPZ); Varies (Industrial Park); Focus on warehousing/logistics (FTZ) |
| Land Area | Specific minimum area requirements (e.g., 1000 ha multi-product, 100 ha sector-specific) | No specific minimum (EPZ); Varies (Industrial Park); No specific minimum (FTZ) |