Business Standard

Amend MSMED Act to ensure faster payments to MSEs WORKING CAPITAL INTENSITY OF MSEs

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DELAYS IN RECEIPT of dues from corporates remain a major challenge for micro and small enterprise­s (MSEs) in India, along with high cost of working capital finance and collateral requiremen­ts of lenders.

The Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise­s Developmen­t (MSMED) Act, 2006 stipulates that receivable­s of MSE suppliers must be paid within 45 days and accordingl­y disclosed in the buyer company’s annual financial statements.

However, CRISIL’s study of receivable­s of its rated MSEs in four large industries — engineerin­g & capital goods, chemicals (including pharmaceut­icals), electrical components & equipment, and steel products — reveals that receivable­s are nearly twice the stipulated period. MSEs constitute three-fourths of the working enterprise­s in these industries and face the common challenge of sizeable working capital requiremen­t because of their high receivable­s and inventory positions, accentuate­d by low bargaining power with principal customers.

CRISIL believes two quick amendments of the provisions of the MSMED Act can make it more effective. First, the recently launched Udyog Aadhar must be made mandatory for all transactio­ns so that identifica­tion of MSEs and reporting of corporate payments to them becomes easy and verifiable. Second, the government must allow each industry to determine the optimal time period for clearing trade payables based on its own working capital cycle.

Once the credit terms are mutually agreed by the buyer and their MSE supplier and adhered to, the predictabi­lity of cash flows becomes easier to assess for lenders. This should help banks to shift to cash flow-based funding from balance sheet or collateral-based MSE funding.

Steel products Electrical components & equipment Chemicals

Engineerin­g & capital goods Gross current Inventory assets (in days) 225 Receivable­s 180 135 90 45 0

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