ASIA / PACIFIC Page 4 n THE ASIAN REPORTER January 6, 2014 India gold tax hits bridal budgets; smuggling up By Kay Johnson AP Business Writer UMBAI, India — With India’s wedding season in full swing, the glass sales counters in Mumbai’s famed Zhaveri gold bazaars are crowded with customers eyeing elaborate headpieces, nose rings, and necklaces. No one does jewelry quite like an Indian bride, who by tradition wears all the gold she can stand up in and her family can afford. These days, though, even the most ambitious bridal budgets don’t bring the bling like they used to, thanks to hikes in import duties and a rise in local gold prices that have shoppers like Rajanikant Mehta grumbling. Mehta, who owns a factory outside the capital, had planned to spend about 100,000 rupees ($1,800) on a necklace for the woman who married his son last month, but was unhappy about what he was getting for his money. Gold prices in India, which imports nearly all its gold, have risen 50 percent over the past three years to about 87,000 rupees, or about $1,400, an ounce. Thanks to the new tax and weaker rupee, that’s about a 20 percent premium over the world market price, hovering just under $1,200 an ounce. “The price of gold should be lower,” Mehta complained. “This is a globalized world. If the prices are similar to the prices elsewhere, then the purchase of gold will increase.” More gold-buying, though, is exactly what the Indian government is trying to stop by raising import duties three times last year to 10 percent on gold bullion — up from two percent in January — and 15 percent on gold jewelry. Gold is India’s second-biggest import behind oil, and purchases have soared in recent years as rising incomes from a decade of economic growth sent Indian consumers on a buying streak. The problem is that the greater buying of the precious metal has dealt a blow to India’s economy by increasing the flow of money out of country compared to inflows. As a result, the current account deficit rose to a historic high of 4.8 percent of India’s gross domestic product in the fiscal year that ended in March 2013. That in turn has helped weaken the rupee by about 10 percent this year, making many products more expensive by raising the cost of oil, priced in dollars, and other raw materials. But in trying to discourage gold-buying, India is taking on a passion that dates back thousands of years and is deeply entwined in Indian culture. In some Hindu legends, Brahma, the god who created the universe, was born from a gold egg. The goddess Lakshmi is portrayed with a golden complexion and gold coins flowing from her hands. It’s considered good luck to give gold, especially to a bride. Still, the tax measures appear to have worked, with gold imports down 32 percent in the July-September quarter and India on track to lose its status as the world’s No. 1 consumer of gold from China. The drop has eased pressure on the current account deficit, now on track to reach a more comfortable annual average of three percent of GDP. The government hasn’t said what it plans to do with the extra revenue, but the country faces a big fiscal deficit, so every bit helps. The official numbers tell only part of the story, though, since the higher import duties have also given birth to increasingly creative smuggling schemes. According to Indian media reports, customs authorities have busted people with gold bars hidden in mobile phone battery compartments, a man with gold M VILLAGE OF WIDOWS. Women return after work at Deoli-Benigram village in Rudraprayag district, in the northern state of Uttarakhand, India. The Indian government still doesn’t have a final toll for the thousands of peo- ple killed in massive flash floods last year, but in the Himalayan hamlet known as the Village of Widows, the loss is all too specific: 57 people killed, about a quarter of its population. The village has 37 widows from the floods, making up about a third of its remaining inhabitants and giving the town its grim new name. (AP Photo/Rajesh Kumar Singh) ‘Village of Widows’ struggles after Indian floods By Biswajeet Banerjee The Associated Press EOLI-BENIGRAM, India — The Indian government still doesn’t have a final toll for the thousands of people killed in massive flash floods last year, but in the Himalayan hamlet known as the Village of Widows, the loss is all too specific: 57 people killed, about a quarter of its population. Six months after walls of melted glacier, mud, and debris came crashing down the mountainside, the village officially named Deoli-Benigram has 37 widows from the floods, making up about a third of its remaining inhabitants and giving the town its grim new name. Along with their loved ones, the grieving women’s livelihoods were also lost, and they say the state’s help is not enough. “Just six months ago, we were the richest family in this village, and now we do not know where our next meal will come from,” says Bijaya Devi, tears rolling down her face as her orphaned one-year-old grandson reaches up to touch her cheek. Devi lost her husband, three of her sons, and a nephew in the June 17 floods, which devastated the temple town of Kedarnath where most of the men in the village made their livings. At age 64, Devi is the village’s oldest widow. The youngest is her 22-year-old daughter-in-law. Both of their husbands worked in the family’s small lodge and grocery store in Kedarnath which catered to pilgrims of the shrine. The Indian government has been criticized for its slow response to the floods in the northern state of Uttarakhand, near Tibet. In all, about 1,000 bodies were found and some 5,700 people are missing. The early monsoon floods struck near the end of the summer Hindu pilgrimage to the Kedarnath shrine — one of four major temple towns in the area 11,500 feet D Summer Run high in the Garhwal Himalayan mountain range. Many of the surrounding people depend on temple tourism to make their livings, either as priests, innkeepers, or guides with mules to take pilgrims up the steep trails. The Kedarnath temple — dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva — was not badly damaged itself, but the area around it is still strewn with piles of debris up to 10 feet high. The government has distributed 500,000 rupees (about $8,000) to families in the area who lost a breadwinner, but the villagers say what they need are jobs, and for roads and electricity to be restored. They worry that next summer’s pilgrims won’t come to the devastated area, even if they did have a way to rebuild their businesses. But with the harsh Himalayan winter setting in, many are concerned just with surviving. “Earlier, the life in the hills was dangerous, but now it is hell. There are no roads, no water, no electricity, and no jobs,” said Vinod Kumar in the village of Bhatwadi, also near Kedarnath. “People in many villages are still living in make-shift tents. How can they survive in tents? How will they keep themselves warm?” q Tanaka’s team says he can seek career in MLB Continued from page 3 began in 1998 and ran through last offseason, there was no cap on bidding and only the highest bidder could negotiate with the player. Boston obtained pitcher Daisuke Matsuzaka from the Seibu Lions before the 2007 season for $51,111,111.11, and agreed to a $52-million, six-year contract. Texas got pitcher Yu Darvish from the Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters before the 2012 season for $51,703,411 and gave him a $56-million, six-year deal. Retirement Apartments • Studio & One-Bedroom Apartments • Affordable Rent with No Costly Buy-Ins or Application Fees • Federal Rent Subsidies Available • Ideal Urban location near shopping, bus lines, restaurants, and more! 7810 SE Foster Road Portland, OR 97206 503 • 774 • 8885 • Enjoy our small community atmosphere that’s relaxed & friendly! BLING ON A BUDGET. An Indian salesman writes details about gold jewelry at a shop in Mumbai, India. Gold is India’s second-biggest import behind oil, and purchases have soared in recent years as ris- ing incomes from a decade of economic growth sent Indian consumers on a buying streak. The problem is that the greater buying of the precious metal has dealt a blow to India’s economy by increasing the flow of money out of country compared to inflows. As a result, the current account deficit rose to a historic high of 4.8 percent of India’s gross domestic product in the fiscal year that ended in March. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade) necklaces wrapped around his legs, and another man who had fashioned 109 solid-gold staples, painted them gray, and stapled them to the box of a television he was legally importing. Local media reported the staples weighed a total of 755 grams (26.6 ounces) and were valued at 1.9 million rupees (about $30,500). The seizures are probably only a fraction of the amount of smuggled gold getting through, according to the U.K.-based World Gold Council. “Going by the number of seizures that have been made at airports and elsewhere, there is enough evidence to say that smuggling probably has doubled this year,” said Somasundaram, the India director for the World Gold Council. It’s impossible to know the exact amount being successfully smuggled in, said Somasundaram, who uses just one name. But the council has noted a 125 percent rise in third-quarter gold sales in Thailand over the same period the previous year, to more than 35 tons. That suggests Indian smugglers may be buying much of their gold there. Despite the steps to limit imports, India’s demand for gold remains robust. It’s plainly evident during wedding sea- son, which runs from November through January. The custom of adorning brides with gold is both spiritual — gold is a powerful symbol of purity — and practical. The wife’s wedding adornments belong to her as insurance against a bad marriage, even though many men confiscate it. In the southern state of Kerala, the escalation of bridal jewelry extravagance is so dramatic that the local women’s commission has even proposed a law limiting how much a bride can wear — a measure bound to meet popular opposition. “Everyone likes gold. Marriage happens just once in your life,” Abhirami Damodaran said as she shopped for her wedding jewelry. The daughter of a real estate businessman in Kerala, she plans to flaunt a whopping 3.2 kilograms (about 7 pounds) of gold worth about 9.6 million rupees, or $150,000, on her big day. “When we wear gold, it’s not only the bride who is happy, but her parents as well,” she said. “They are giving gold as part of a future investment.”