ECB clearances will be easier now
13 Nov 1999
The finance ministry has simplified procedures for approving external commercial borrowings. The ministry is introducing a single window system for these clearances, which will be managed entirely by the Reserve Bank of India. Currently both the RBI and the finance ministry are involved. Only, since the RBI is not yet ready to handle the flow of applications, this will take a little while to implement.
To begin with, it is expected, the government will double the present threshold limit of $10 million for applications processed through the RBI''s automatic window. What''s more, companies will be able to file applications with RBIs regional offices instead of its Mumbai headquarters.
Procedures at the discretionary clearance window managed by the finance ministry will be simplified. The current four-stage procedure will be replaced by three stages. Today, applicants must visit the finance ministry offices in New Delhi to file their applications and when the loan agreement is signed, and then the RBI, when clearance under the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act is sought and loan draw-down begins. Soon applicants will need to visit only the RBI once, right at the end when Fera clearance is granted and draw-down permitted.
These will be interim changes, pending delegation of the entire approval authority to the RBI. The central bank has informed the ministry that it will take some time for it set up the required infrastructure to handle all cases. At present, its department of banking operations and development handles the work.
The government had opened the automatic window three years ago to enable smaller companies to secure clearances faster.
Latest articles
Featured articles
The decoupling paradox: Why Wall Street keeps funding AI despite $100 oil
By Axel Miller | 11 May 2026
AI infrastructure stocks continue rallying despite $100 oil as investors bet on productivity gains and semiconductor demand in 2026.
Hybrid bonding gains attention as AI chip packaging demand grows
By Cygnus | 23 Apr 2026
Hybrid bonding is driving AI chip packaging demand as backend technologies gain importance in the semiconductor supply chain.
The agentic transition: how enterprises are scaling AI from pilot to profit
By Cygnus | 22 Apr 2026
AI has entered its execution era. Discover how companies like Valeo and Microsoft are scaling agentic AI systems—from copilots to autonomous workflows driving real business impact.
Post-splashdown: What Artemis II taught us about the ‘deep space wall’
By Axel Miller | 15 Apr 2026
Artemis II splashdown marks a breakthrough in deep space exploration. Discover AVATAR radiation data, Orion’s distance record, and insights shaping NASA’s 2028 Moon mission.
Can aviation go green? The multi-billion dollar race for sustainable fuel
By Cygnus | 10 Apr 2026
Airlines are racing to adopt sustainable aviation fuel, but limited supply and high costs challenge the future of green aviation.
The battery race: who will control the future of electric vehicles?
By Axel Miller | 08 Apr 2026
The global battery race is reshaping the electric vehicle industry, with China, the US, and Europe competing for control over supply chains and technology.
AI vs governments: Who controls the future of intelligence?
By Cygnus | 07 Apr 2026
Governments and AI companies like OpenAI and Anthropic are shaping the future of intelligence amid rising policy conflicts and global competition.
Strait of Hormuz: how one chokepoint controls the global economy
By Axel Miller | 06 Apr 2026
The Strait of Hormuz is a critical global chokepoint. Learn how disruptions impact oil prices, shipping, and the global economy.
The $2 trillion AI infrastructure race: Who will control global compute?
By Cygnus | 06 Apr 2026
AI spending is set to exceed $2 trillion in 2026, driving a global race in data centers, chips, and energy infrastructure.


