External Commercial Borrowing (ECB)
- February 15, 2021
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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External Commercial Borrowing (ECB)
Subject: Economy
Context: ECB as cheap source of borrowing needs to be availed with caution said RBI director.
Concept:
- It is a commercial loan raised by an eligible resident entity from recognised non-resident entities.
- These foreign sources could be:
- Commercial bank loans
- Buyers’ credit and suppliers’ credit
- Securitised instruments such as Floating Rate Notes and Fixed Rate Bonds etc.
- Credit from official export credit agencies and commercial borrowings from the private sector window of Multilateral Financial Institutions.
- Commercial borrowings account for the largest component of India’s external debt.
Why ECB?
- With interest rates in the US and Euro Zone currently being markedly lower than domestic rates, a corporate can save on its financing costs by taking recourse to ECB even after it takes into account associated costs such as hedging, guarantee fees and other transaction costs.
- The six-month London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) or any other six-month interbank interest rate applicable to a currency of borrowing such as Euro Interbank Offered Rate is the benchmark rate for ECBs in foreign currencies.
- In India it is allowed for expansion of existing capacity as well as for fresh investment.
- ECB is the considered best solution to push productive lending without implications for price rise (as pushing liquidity involves risk of inflatioon)
- ECB is different from FDI as ECB means any kind of funding other than Equity which comes under FDI
Concerns with ECB
- Borrowers’ skill to use it to their advantage is a must for such instruments
- Exchange rate risk involved in servicing the debt
- Hedging off ECB is must and involves costs and this option may not be always available
- Higher magnitude of foreign debt could lead to rupee appreciation and reduction in the competitiveness of our exports