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Business Environment




                    Notes          international prices to exporters of engineering goods was announced. Imports of some raw
                                   materials were placed under an Open General Licence.
                                   The import policy for 1968-69 was oriented to provide special import facilities for exporters.
                                   Units in the priority industries which had exported at least 10 per cent of 'their productions in
                                   1967-68 were given facilities to import their requirements from sources of their choice.  Ten
                                   priority industries were selected on the basis of their export potential and it was laid down that
                                   units engaged in these  industries would have to export 5 to 10 per cent of their production,
                                   failing which they would be liable to cuts in their import entitlements.
                                   In the field of export  credit, the  Reserve Bank  of India  introduced a  scheme under which
                                   preferential rates of discount were provided for refinancing of pre-shipment credits granted by
                                   the commercial bank to certain categories of exporters at concessional rates. It also provided a
                                   subsidy to banks on export credit granted by them in the shape of packing and post-shipment
                                   advances.
                                   During all these years there was absence of a long-term export strategy. During recent years,
                                   international agencies  like the  IMF and  World Bank  have  been  pressuring the  developing
                                   countries to open up them in improving the economic efficiency of their industrial sector and
                                   compete in the international markets.

                                   11.1.2 EXIM Policy 1992-1997

                                   When the Eighth Plan commenced, the three-year Import-Export policy (1990-93), valid until
                                   March  1993  was  in  operation.  With  a view  to  reinforcing  the  trade  policy  reforms  and
                                   complementing the fiscal, industrial and investment measures, the new five-year Export-Import
                                   Policy (1992-97) was introduced with effect from April 1992. For the first time, the policy was
                                   given an export bias. Earlier this policy was known as Import-Export policy; the new policy was
                                   titled Export-Import Policy  (EXIM Policy). Several schemes were introduced or modified to
                                   eliminate regulatory measures and discretionary controls impinging on free trade.
                                   Just before the launching of the EXIM Policy 1992-97, on March 1, 1992, the Liberalised Exchange
                                   Rate Management System (LERMS) was introduced. Under the LERMS, exporters were required
                                   to  surrender 40  per cent of the foreign exchange earning at  the official exchange rate.  The
                                   Government would use the amount to import essential items such as petroleum, fertilisers and
                                   life saving drugs. The exporters were allowed to sell the remaining 60 per cent of the foreign
                                   exchange or use it to finance their own imports, which facility was not given to exporters in the
                                   pre-reform period. This system acted as a self-correcting mechanism to keep trade deficit under
                                   control. With effect from June 1992, the 15% Foreign Exchange Conservation (Travel) Tax was
                                   abolished. The travel tax had become redundant with the introduction of partial convertibility
                                   of rupee and Liberalised Exchange Rate Management System (LERMS) under which foreign
                                   exchange for travel had to be obtained at the market rate.

                                   Along with this change in the exchange rate regime, the import licensing system was abolished
                                   for capital goods, intermediates and components; these items could be imported on Open General
                                   Licence (OGL) subject to payment of tariffs (Ministry of Commerce).
                                   To promote investment by Non-resident Indians, a new deposit scheme was introduced in June
                                   1992, under which  accounts in  Indian rupees  could be  opened with  authorized dealers  by
                                   remittance of funds in freely convertible foreign exchange from aboard or by transfer of funds
                                   from the  existing on-resident  (external)/FCNR accounts.  No  penalty was  to be levied for
                                   premature withdrawal of existing non-resident deposits for the purpose of making investment
                                   in the proposed scheme. Full convertibility of rupee on trade account (current account) was
                                   introduced and dual or partial exchange rate was abolished. In March 1993, the exchange rate
                                   was unified and transactions on trade account were freed from exchange control.




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