Exporters Given 15 Months
from Export Date to Realize Proceeds, Present 9 Months Period Extended
· States Credit Upped by 30% for Six
months
· Banks Buffer Capital Reserve
Inactivated for One Year
· Present Measures in Addition to
those Announced Last Week
RBI announces
new measures to ease the compliance burden on sectors of the Indian economy that
are most affected by the coronavirus pandemic. Accordingly, it has extended realisation
period of export proceeds to give more time to exporters to comply with regulations.
Presently,
the value of goods or software exports made by exporters is required to be realized
fully and repatriated to the country within nine months from the date of export.
The time period for exports made up to or on July 31, 2020, has been extended to
15 months from the date of export.
The measure
will enable the exporters to realise their receipts, especially
from COVID-19 affected countries within the extended time period and also provide
greater flexibility to them to negotiate future export contracts with buyers abroad,”
the RBI said in a statement.
The apex
bank has also decided to increase ways and means advances (WMA) limit by 30 per
cent for all States/UTs to enable these to tide over the situation arising from
the coronavirus pandemic. The revised limits will come into force with effect from
April 1, 2020 and will be valid till September 30, 2020.
The RBI
had set up an Advisory Committee under the Chairmanship of Sudhir
Shrivastava to review the Ways and Means limits for States/UTs.
The decision to increase the limit has been taken even though its final recommendations
are pending.
In yet
another decision, the RBI has decided not to activate countercyclical capital buffer
(CCyB) for one year or earlier, as may be necessary. This
would free banks from maintaining a capital buffer at a time when there is a need
to boost investment climate in the economy by offering easy credit to industry.
The framework
on CCyB was put in place by the RBI in terms of guidelines
issued on February 5, 2015 wherein it was advised that the CCyB
would be activated as and when the circumstances warranted, and that the decision
would normally be pre-announced. The framework envisages the credit-to-GDP gap as
the main indicator, which is used in conjunction with other supplementary indicators.
The central
bank had last week sought to cushion both borrowers and lenders against the unprecedented
disruption triggered by the COVID-19 outbreak and allowed the banking companies
to provide a three-month grace period on loan repayments.
It also
gave banks the breathing space on default tagging in the event of customers skipping
payments. All term loans, including agricultural term loans, retail and crop loans
and working capital payments, will be covered by the three-month moratorium, the
RBI said.
“All commercial
banks, NBFCs (nonbanking finance companies), all-India financial institutions are
permitted to grant a moratorium of three months on payment of all instalments falling
due between March 1, 2020, and May 31, 2020,” the RBI had said on Friday.
The measures
came on the day the central bank slashed the benchmark repo rate to a record low
to help spur demand when the nation of a billion-plus consumers is to end its Covid-19
lockdown by mid-April as per the current timetable.
Here
are the new measures announced by the central bank
1. Extension of realisation
period of export proceeds
Presently
value of the goods or software exports made by the exporters is required to be realized
fully and repatriated to the country within a period of 9 months from the date of
exports. In view of the disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the time period
for realization and repatriation of export proceeds for exports made up to or on
July 31, 2020, has been extended to 15 months from the date of export. The measure
will enable the exporters to realise their receipts, especially
from COVID-19 affected countries within the extended period and also provide greater
flexibility to the exporters to negotiate future export contracts with buyers abroad.
2. Review of Limits of Way and Means Advances
of States/UTs
Reserve
Bank had constituted an Advisory Committee (Chairman: Sudhir
Shrivastava) to review the Ways and Means limits for State
Governments and Union Territories (UTs). Pending submission of the final recommendations
by the Committee, it has been decided to increase WMA limit by 30 percent from the
existing limit for all States/UTs to enable the State Governments to tide over the
situation arising from the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. The revised limits
will come into force with effect from April 1, 2020 and will be valid till September
30, 2020.
3. Implementation of countercyclical capital
buffer
The framework
on countercyclical capital buffer (CCyB) was put in place
by the Reserve Bank in terms of guidelines issued on February 5, 2015 wherein it
was advised that the CCyB would be activated as and when
the circumstances warranted, and that the decision would normally be pre-announced.
The framework envisages the credit-to-GDP gap as the main indicator, which is used
in conjunction with other supplementary indicators. Based on the review and empirical
analysis of CCyB indicators, it has been decided that
it is not necessary to activate CCyB for a period of one
year or earlier, as may be necessary.