The Hindu - International

Interest subsidy for exporters to be capped in Q1 FY25

- Amiti Sen

The Union government has notified an interest subsidy cap of ₹2.5 crore for individual export units in the first quarter of fiscal year 202425 under the popular interest equalisati­on scheme (IES) for identified sectors and MSMEs.

This is in continuati­on of its capping policy, introduced this fiscal, to ensure more units can benefit from the scheme, according to sources.

But the government is not yet ready to consider the demand made by exporters to increase the subsidy rates despite several submission­s by exporters, an official tracking the matter told businessli­ne.

The DGFT issued a notification on Wednesday clarifying that a cap of ₹2.50 crore per IEC is imposed till June 30, 2024, for the quarter starting from April 1, 2024.

“Last May, the government introduced a cap of ₹10 crore per importer exporter code (IEC) on the annual net subvention amount. All disburseme­nts made from April 1, 2023, onwards were counted towards the IEC for the current financial year. The latest notification is to clarify that the cap will continue in the new fiscal as well. As the extension of the scheme is till the first quarter of 202425, the cap has been calibrated accordingl­y,” the official said.

Subsidy cap

The subsidy cap for individual exporters would ensure that a greater number of eligible exporters can benefit from the scheme instead of the amount getting concentrat­ed in the hands of few, per the government.

The IES was first implemente­d in April 2015. Under the scheme, exporters are extended credit by banks at a reduced rate. The banks are later reimbursed by the government for their lower earnings.

In December last year, the Union Cabinet approved an additional allocation of ₹2,500 crore for continuati­on of the scheme beyond the current fiscal, till June 30, 2024.

The scheme would continue for all the targeted beneficiaries which include merchant exporters of the identified 410 tariff lines and all manufactur­er exporters from MSME sectors. The rates of subsidy were at 3% for MSME sectors and 2% for the rest.

Last month, the RBI officially extended the scheme through a notification. “Although exporters have been making a case for increased rate of subvention, due to low global demand owing to economic slowdown and geopolitic­al problems, an immediate increase seems unlikely,” the official said.

(The writer is with The Hindu businessli­ne)

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India