Business Standard

Relief for MSME promoters under debt scheme likely

- SHREYA NANDI New Delhi, 20 June Business Standard

The Centre is planning to make procedural changes in the stressed asset guarantee plan for small businesses to make it more popular. With this, promoters may not need to take risk in their personal capacity to avail the benefits of the scheme.

“The industry has been calling for tweaking some provisions of the scheme so that more businesses are able to avail benefits. There could be around four-five procedural changes in the scheme,” a senior government official told Business Standard.

The micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSME) ministry will soon take it up with the finance ministry's department of financial services before implementi­ng any changes, the official cited above said.

The government had, in May last year, announced a slew of measures to help MSMES tide through the Covid-19 crisis. Credit Guarantee Scheme for Subordinat­e Debt was announced to revive small business units that had become stressed. The idea was to support distressed MSMES by infusing capital in the form of equity.

In the scheme, the government is facilitati­ng a provision of ~20,000 crore as subordinat­e debt. According to the guidelines, personal loans are given to promoters of stressed MSMES, which are infused by the promoter as equity into the business unit, thereby enhancing the liquidity and the debt-equity ratio.

Promoters of distressed units are given a debt facility of up to 15 per cent of the promoter’s stake or ~75 lakh, whichever is lower. Besides, the promoters are required to bring in 10 per cent of the sub-debt amount as collateral, while 90 per cent guarantee coverage is given under the scheme. Such guidelines have been the main reasons for the scheme not gaining popularity among businesses, the official said.

The response to the scheme has been lukewarm, government and industry officials said. As of May 14, guarantees to the tune of only ~68.39 crore were issued, benefittin­g 632 businesses, had reported earlier.

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