Merchant credit card for MSME traders soon
- March 28, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Merchant credit card for MSME traders soon
Subject: Schemes
Concept:
- The government will likely roll out a merchant credit card (MCC) facility for traders in the micro, small and medium enterprises (MSME) category this year to help these units tide over short-term liquidity woes.
Background
- A plan to launch a digital “UPI-linked credit card” for MSMEs, designed by the state-run Small Industries Development Bank of India (Sidbi), could be delayed, as it requires broader inter-ministerial consultations, the sources said.
- Moreover, the idea of firming up a common set of guidelines for the two cards — MCC and Vyapar Credit Card (VCC) — with common objectives has also been put off.
- Vyapar Credit Card :
- The VCC, as proposed by SIDBI promises features, including interest-free credit for 20-50 days and Mudra loan facility.
- For micro units, it also proposes up to 85% coverage under the credit guarantee fund run by the National Credit Guarantee Trustee Company under the Department of Financial Services (DFS).
- The MSME ministry had earlier roped in Sidbi for launching the VCC as an incentive for those units that get themselves registered on its Udyam portal.
- The move was aimed at driving more such small businesses towards formalisation.
- Given its several features, the VCC will require large-scale deliberations, which will take time.
Details of the issue
- It is being designed along the lines of the Kisan Credit Card and will likely offer incentives such as short-term, collateral-free loans up to a limit at a cheaper rate to these units.
- The framework for the MCC is being developed by the Indian Banks’ Association (IBA), with active guidance from the DFS and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).
- The ministries of commerce and industry and MSME, too, are involved in this elaborate exercise, said one of the sources.
Significance of the move
- The plan to issue such credit card facilities is also part of the government’s broader move to ensure greater flow of formal credit to MSMEs that account for a bulk of the country’s job creation.
- According to the World Bank’s assessment, over 40% MSMEs in India lack access to formal sources of finance.
- In recent years, MSMEs have been hit hard by a combination of factors, such as demonetisation, the rollout of the goods and services tax regime and, more recently, the pandemic.
- The Covid outbreak, particularly, caused a large number of MSMEs to sink, according to several analysts.
- To soften the blow, the government came out with the Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) to facilitate guaranteed loans in the aftermath of the pandemic.
- In April, it approved a $808-million (Rs 6,062 crore) support to revitalise Covid-hit MSMEs through a programme backed by the World Bank, among other steps.
- MSME Contribution: MSMEs account for about 40% of the country’s exports, 6% of the manufacturing GDP and almost 25% of the services GDP.