RBI Opens ₹50,000-cr Liquidity Tap for Banks to On-Lend to Healthcare
Sector
To cushion the economic impact of the second wave of
Covid-19, the Reserve Bank of India swung into action on Wednesday, announcing
a slew of measures aimed at easing the financing constraints being faced by
vaccine manufacturers and importers of life-saving equipment, besides
small/medium businesses and individuals.
The central bank announced a special on-tap liquidity of
₹50,000 crore with tenor up to three years at repo rate (4 per cent) for
lending to emergency healthcare required to fight Covid
crisis. The macro impact of the scheme can be gauged from the fact that
₹50,000 crore is roughly 9 per cent of India’s total health expenditure
of ₹6-lakh crore under private final consumption expenditure in 2019-20.
Unveiling these measures, Governor Shaktikanta Das emphasised that the central bank is committed to go
unconventional and devise new responses as and when the situation demands.
“Major beneficiaries of the announced healthcare
liquidity scheme would be pharmaceutical manufacturers, vaccine-makers,
healthcare equipment manufacturers, hospitals and diagnostic players.
Penetration of hospitals/ dispensaries may increase as players can now opt for
capex funding. Also, diagnostic chains can use this opportunity to penetrate
into Tier-II cities and beyond,” said Rahul Prithiani,
Director, Crisil.
Markets rise
The stock markets gave a thumbs-up to the RBI moves. The
Sensex, which was trading just around 40-50 points higher in the morning,
closed with gains of 424 points, or 0.88 per cent, at 48,677. The Nifty closed
higher by 0.84 per cent or 121 points at 14,671.
To provide support to small businesses, micro and small
units, and unorganised sector entities affected by
the Covid second wave, the RBI said it will conduct
special three-year long-term repo operations (SLTRO) of ₹10,000 crore at
repo rate for small finance banks (SFBs), to be deployed for fresh lending of
up to ₹10 lakh per borrower. This will be available till October 31, 2021.
To address liquidity issues of smaller microfinance
institutions, SFBs have been permitted to consider fresh lending to the MFIs
(with asset size of up to ₹500 crore) for on-lending to individual
borrowers as PSL.
Individuals, small businesses and MSMEs, which did not
resort to any of the earlier restructuring frameworks, having an aggregate
exposure of up to ₹25 crore and were classified as ‘Standard’ as on March
31, 2021, will be eligible to be considered for restructuring under Resolution
Framework 2.0 for Covid-related stressed assets.
Resolution Framework
This restructuring is open up to September 30, 2021 and
will have to be implemented within 90 days of invocation. In respect of
individual borrowers and small businesses that availed themselves of loan
restructuring under Resolution Framework 1.0, where the resolution plan
permitted moratorium of less than two years, the RBI said lending institutions
can modify such plans to increase the period of moratorium and/or extend the
residual tenor up to a total of two years. For small businesses and MSMEs
restructured earlier, lending institutions can, as a one-time measure, review
the working capital sanctioned limits.
To further incentivise
inclusion of unbanked MSMEs into the banking system, the current incentive to
deduct credit disbursed to new borrowers from banks’ deposits for calculation
of the cash reserve ratio (CRR) has been extended further. This exemption,
currently available for exposures up to ₹25 lakh and for credit disbursed
up to the fortnight ending October 1, 2021, has been extended till December 31,
2021.