RBI Issues Key Relief Measures for Exporters
RBI has announced important temporary relaxations to help exporters manage global delays and cash-flow pressure
-> Export realisation period:
Revised Limit: 9 months → 15 months
Rationale : Global payment delays and logistical disruptions.
Benefit to Exporters: Additional time to realise export proceeds without triggering FEMA non-compliance.
->Advance Payments:
Extended Shipment Period
Revised Limit: Shipment window extended from 1 year to 3 years, or as per contract terms, whichever is later.
Rationale: Supply-chain bottlenecks and prolonged shipment timelines.
Benefit: Protects exporters from FEMA violations arising due to shipment delays beyond 12 months.
Provides operational certainty for long-gestation export orders.
-> Debt Relief for Affected Businesses:
Measures Include:
- Moratorium on term-loan instalments and working-capital interest due between Sept–Dec 2025.
- Banks permitted to reassess drawing power and relax margin requirements.
Rationale : Acute cash-flow stress across key export-linked sectors.
Benefit: Immediate liquidity relief.
Eases repayment obligations and prevents short-term defaults.
-> Export Credit Relaxation:
Revised Credit Period: 270 days → 450 days (valid until 31 March 2026).
Additional Flexibility : Packing credit may be liquidated through alternate funding sources.
Rationale: Delays in shipments and order fulfillment cycles.
Benefit: Reduces financing pressure on exporters.
Enhances flexibility in managing packing credit obligations.
Summary
The RBI’s measures provide critical breathing space, support liquidity, and offer regulatory flexibility to exporters during a period of heightened global uncertainty. These measures are effective immediately.