Commerce Department pushing to expedite export promotion mission
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Commerce Department pushing to expedite export promotion mission
Commerce Department pushing to expedite export promotion mission
To lend support to exporters who are facing greater global uncertainty, the Commerce
Department is trying to expedite Expenditure Finance Committee (EFC) clearance for
the export promotion mission announced in Budget 2025 with an annual allocation of
₹2,240 crore. The mission will include a number of schemes, such as interest
equalisation and market promotion funds for exporters, especially taking care of the
needs of the MSME sector, sources said. “The Commerce Department is seeking a
term of five years for the export promotion mission, as continuity in the schemes
announced under the mission will provide stability to exporters in the uncertain global
environment. Now, it is for the EFC to decide what the term of the scheme will be,” an
official tracking the matter told .India’s goods exports remained flat in FY25 at $437.4
billion as continued global slowdown and US President Donald Trump’s reciprocal
tariffs affected orders. EFC is a committee that examines the financial aspects of
proposed projects or schemes before they are approved. The export promotion
mission will also help in promoting factoring services for exporters to reduce their
dependence on traditional banks and also promote new exporters, new products and
new markets.
Exporters are eager for an early roll-out of the export promotion mission as the popular
interest equalisation scheme (IES), under which exporters were extended loans at
subsidised rates, was discontinued last December. The scheme is to be reinstated as
part of the mission. With Trump’s reciprocal tariff announcements destabilising global
trade, exporters have sought an interest subvention of 5 per cent against the 3 per
cent extended earlier. “The EFC will take a final call on the subvention rate based on
the interest rate in peer countries. Interest equalisation is not an incentive but an
attempt to provide an equal playing field to exporters,” the official said. The export
promotion mission will also take into consideration factors such as giving relief to
MSMEs from collateral. “In spite of an export order, an MSME exporter may not be
able to take it because he may not have the resources to pay for collateral and hence
get deprived of credit. How does one alleviate that? The mission will try to address
such problems,” the official said. The mission will also subsume the Market Access
Initiative scheme, which provides assistance for the enhancement of exports through
accessing new markets or through increasing the share in the existing markets.