Cabinet approves Loan Guarantee Scheme for Covid Affected Sectors (LGSCAS) and to enhance the corpus of
Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS)
On account of the disruptions caused by the second wave of COVID 19
specially on healthcare sector, the Union Cabinet, chaired by the Prime Minister
Shri Narendra Modi has approved Loan Guarantee Scheme for Covid
Affected Sectors (LGSCAS) enabling funding to the tune of Rs.
50,000 crore to provide financial guarantee cover for brownfield expansion and greenfield
projects related to health/ medical infrastructure.
The Cabinet has also approved introduction of a scheme for other sectors/lenders
including those allied to better healthcare. Detailed modalities would be finalized
in due course depending upon the evolving situation.
In addition, the Cabinet has also approved additional funding up to
Rs. 1,50,000 crore under Emergency
Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS).
Targets:
LGSCAS: The Scheme would be applicable
to all eligible loans sanctioned up to 31.03.2022, or till an amount of Rs. 50,000 crore is sanctioned, whichever is earlier.
ECLGS: It is a continuing scheme. The Scheme would be
applicable to all eligible loans sanctioned under Guaranteed Emergency Credit Line
(GECL)till 30.09.2021, or till an amount of rupees four lakh fifty thousand crore
is sanctioned under the GECL, whichever is earlier.
Impact:
LGSCAS: The LGSCAS has been formulated
as a specific response to an exceptional situation the country has witnessed due
to lack of adequate health infrastructure in the light of second wave of Covid-19.
The approved scheme is expected to help the country in shoring up its much-needed
healthcare infrastructure along with creating more employment opportunities. The
main objective of LGSCAS is to partially mitigate credit risk (primarily construction
risk) and facilitate bank credit at lower rates of interest.
ECLGS: It is a continuing scheme
and recently, on account of the disruptions caused by the second wave of COVID 19
pandemic to businesses across various sectors of the economy, Government has further
enlarged the scope of ECLGS. The enhancement is expected to provide much needed
relief to various sectors of the economy by incentivizing lending institutions to
provide additional credit of up to Rs. 1.5 lakh crore
at low cost, thereby enabling business enterprises to meet their operational liabilities
and continue their businesses. Besides supporting MSMEs to continue functioning
during the current unprecedented situation, the Scheme is also expected to have
a positive impact on the economy and support its revival.
Background:
LGSCAS: Government has taken various measures to combat
the crisis caused due to Covid-19 pandemic which has been upended by the second
wave of COVID-19. This wave has placed enormous stress on health facilities as well
as livelihoods and business enterprises in many sectors. This wave has sharply brought
out the need to enhance public and private investments in the health sector. This
is necessary across the country, from metro cities to tier V and VI towns as well
as rural areas. The requirements include additional hospital beds, ICUs, diagnostic
centres, oxygen facilities, telephone or internet based
medical advice and supervision, testing facilities and supplies, cold chain facilities
for vaccines, modem warehousing for medicines and vaccines, isolation facilities
for triage, ramping up of production of ancillary supplies such as syringes and
vials etc. The proposed LGSCAS is aimed at upscaling the medical infrastructure
in the country, specifically targeting underserved areas. LGSCAS would provide a
guarantee of 50 percent for brownfield projects and 75 per cent to greenfield projects for loans sanctioned up to Rs.100 crore,
set up at urban or rural locations other than 8 Metropolitan Tier 1 cities (Class
X cities). For aspirational districts, the guarantee cover for both brownfield expansion
and greenfield projects shall be 75%.
ECLGS: The resurgence of COVID-19
pandemic in India in recent weeks and the associated containment measures adopted
at local/regional levels have created new uncertainties and impacted the nascent
economic revival that was taking shape. In this environment the most vulnerable
category of borrowers are individual borrowers, small businesses and MSMEs, for
which, ECLGS, as a targeted policy response was introduced by Gol. The design of ECGLS provides flexibility to quickly respond
to emerging needs, as has been evidenced by the introduction of ECLGS 2.0, 3.0 and
4.0 as well as changes announced on 30.05.2021, all of which were within available
headroom of Rs 3 lakh crore. Currently, about Rs. 2.6 lakh crore of loans have been sanctioned under ECLGS.
A further uptick is expected due to changes announced recently, extension of limit
of one time restructuring to Rs. 50 crore by RBI on 04.06.2021
and the continuing adverse impact of COVID on businesses.