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In my career, I’ve learned one immutable truth: Systems and processes are only as strong as the stability of the environment they operate in. On February 23, 2026, that stability was shaken. The DGFT issued Notification No. 60/2025-26, which performed a 50% “haircut” on rates and value caps across the board.

This isn’t just a “change in law”; it is a shift in the cost of doing business.

The Practitioner’s Reality: Beyond the SOP

I’ve always viewed RoDTEP not as a “gift” from the government, but as a critical mechanism to ensure we don’t “export our taxes.” These scrips neutralize the embedded costs-fuel, electricity, and mandi taxes.

When the government slashes these rates by half with “immediate effect,” they are asking Exporters to absorb a 1% to 2% hit on their FOB value. For many MSMEs, that isn’t just a dip in the bucket; it’s their entire net margin.

The Strategic “Why”: Infrastructure vs. Incentives

Why would the government do this? In the Union Budget 2026–27 by capping the RoDTEP outflow at ₹10,000 crore, the administration is betting that long-term investments in PM Gati Shakti and port automation will eventually lower our logistics costs more than a tax rebate ever could.

However, as a finance professional, I know that “long-term infrastructure” doesn’t help pay today’s working capital interest. The only silver lining is the February 24th Corrigendum, which spared the Agriculture and Food Processing sectors (Chapters 01-24). For the rest of us in manufacturing and engineering, the “rain” has started, and we need to find cover.

My “Boardroom” Checklist for CEOs & CFOs

Having navigated high-pressure environments-from ERP development to statutory audits-I recommend a three-pronged approach to this crisis:

(a) The Legal Myth of Estoppel: Don’t count on the courts to save this. Judicial precedent (like Chowgule & Co.) clearly states that the government can withdraw trade incentives in the “public interest” or due to “budgetary constraints.” Your strategy must be operational, not litigious.

(b) The Scheme Comparison: It is time for a cold, hard audit. Does the Advance Authorization (AA) or Duty Drawback (DBK) now offer better “bang for your buck” than the diluted RoDTEP?

(c) Pricing Recalculation: We must move past the mindset that these rebates are “bonus income.” They are a cost component. If your LEO (Let Export Order) is dated after Feb 23, your margin has already shrunk. You must renegotiate contracts or optimize operational efficiencies immediately.

Final Thoughts :

In my experience, the most successful organizations are those that adapt to the “nightmare” scenarios before they become catastrophes. This 50% reduction is a wake-up call. We must stop relying on fiscal crutches and start building leaner, more efficient financial structures.

Systems are more than just SOPs on a piece of paper-they are our survival kits. It’s time we updated ours.

Author Bio

A Chartered Accountant by profession. Passionate about learning new things everyday. Passionate about adding value to my knowledge everyday, every moment. View Full Profile

My Published Posts

HSN Mirroring in GST: A Double-Edged Sword for Goods, A Minefield for Services Income-Tax Act 2025 Vs. Traces: Is Your TDS Intimation A Case of Digital Time Travel? KARSETU Migration: Redefining Statutory Compliance through Systemic Readiness DGGI at the Boardroom Door: Arrest risk & personal liability of Directors under GST RoDTEP Rate Cut 2026: A 72-Hour ERP and Margin Stabilisation Plan for Exporters View More Published Posts

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