Banks Must Lend to Healthcare Cos in 30 Days of Availing Funds: RBI

Amount borrowed from RBI should be backed by lending to the specified segments till maturity of the scheme

Banks Must Lend to Healthcare Cos in 30 Days of Availing Funds: RBI
Banks Must Lend to Healthcare Cos in 30 Days of Availing Funds: RBI
PTI - 07 May 2021

The RBI on Friday asked the banks seeking funding from the special Rs 50,000-crore on-tap liquidity window to on-lend money to the healthcare service providers within 30 days of availing the credit facility.

Earlier this week, the RBI had decided to open an on-tap liquidity window of Rs 50,000 crore with tenures of up to three years at the repo rate till March 31, 2022, to boost liquidity for ramping up Covid-19-related healthcare infrastructure and services.

Under the scheme, banks can provide fresh lending support to a wide range of entities including vaccine manufacturers; importers or suppliers of vaccine and priority medical devices; hospitals and dispensaries; and pathology labs and diagnostic centres.

The RBI said requests from banks desirous of availing funds from the central bank will be subject to availability of funds as on the date of application. Funds cannot be guaranteed in case the total amount of Rs 50,000 crore is already availed.

"Furthermore, banks should endeavour to lend within a reasonable period, i.e., not later than 30 days from the date of availing the funds from the RBI," it said in a statement adding that there is no tenure restriction regarding lending by banks under the scheme.

However, the banks will have to ensure that the amount borrowed from the RBI should at all times be backed by lending to the specified segments till maturity of the scheme.

Banks are being incentivised for quick delivery of credit under the scheme through extension of Priority Sector Lending (PSL) classification to such lending up to March 31, 2022. These loans will continue to be classified under PSL till repayment or maturity, whichever is earlier.

Banks can deliver these loans to borrowers directly or through intermediary financial entities regulated by the RBI.

Under the scheme, banks are expected to create a Covid-19 loan book.

"By way of an additional incentive, such banks will be eligible to park their surplus liquidity up to the size of the Covid-19 loan book with the RBI under the reverse repo window at a rate which is 25 bps lower than the repo rate," the RBI said.

Banks that want to deploy their own resources without availing funds from the RBI under the scheme for lending to the specified segments will also be eligible for the incentives.

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