New Delhi: India is considering a proposal to guarantee as much as Rs3 trillion ($39 billion, Dh145.1 billion) of loans to small businesses as part of a plan to restart Asia’s third-largest economy, which is reeling under the impact of a 40-day lockdown, people with knowledge of the matter said.
Under the proposal, small firms will be eligible to borrow an additional 20 per cent of their credit limit, the people said, asking not to be identified as the discussions are private. The extra debt will be fully backed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration, the people said. The government will set up a special fund to pay for any defaults, they said.
India’s government and regulators are slowly coming out with programmes as everyone, from companies to fund managers, struggle under the world’s biggest lockdown, which has halted manufacturing and wiped out consumption. With the economy set to contract for the first time in four decades, Modi’s endorsement is the only way to make it attractive for banks, which are concerned about rising delinquencies, to lend to small businesses.
“A large part of the fiscal package of developed countries such as the US and UK have involved loan guarantees,” said Teresa John, an economist at Nirmal Bang Pvt. “If targets are set for banks and shadow banks for availing refinancing under such a scheme, along with credit guarantees this will, to an extent, ensure credit flow to MSMEs and ultimately help in reviving growth,” she said, referring to micro, small and medium enterprises.
A finance ministry spokesman was not immediately available for comment.
Earlier on Monday, the country’s central bank offered a Rs500 billion credit line to mutual funds to avoid distress sale of assets and calm investor concerns after Franklin Templeton shut six of them last week citing a lack of liquidity.
Small businesses, which form the bedrock of the $2.7 trillion economy, have been the worst hit by the lockdown with their activity coming to a halt. An estimated 100 million workers in mining, construction, manufacturing and services sectors have been rendered jobless due to the lockdown, Subhash Chandra Gar, a former top bureaucrat in the finance ministry, wrote in a blog.
Governments across the world are rushing to help small businesses. The US, earlier this month said it would provide $320 billion to make new loans under the Paycheck Protection Programme, which provides forgivable loans to such companies that keep employees on the payroll for eight weeks, while the Philippines plans to give 35 billion pesos ($690 million) to workers of shuttered small businesses.