15 Jun RBI’s Reviving of FCNR(B) Swap Scheme again in 2026
This article covers “Daily Current Affairs”
SYLLABUS MAPPING : GS Paper 3 : Economy
FOR PRELIMS : FCNR(B) , NRI Deposits , BoP , Forex Reserve Buffer
FOR MAINS : India’s Balance of Payments deficit widened six-fold to $30.8 billion in 2025–26. Examine the causes of this deterioration and evaluate the suite of measures announced by RBI — including the FCNR(B) swap facility — to address external sector vulnerabilities. What structural reforms are necessary to reduce India’s chronic current account deficit?
FCNR(B) scheme
inflows (analysts)
absorbs for banks
deposit rate
to RBI (est. SBI)
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Form | Foreign Currency Non-Resident (Bank) Deposit |
| Who Can Open | NRIs, PIOs (Persons of Indian Origin), OCIs (Overseas Citizens of India) |
| Currency | USD, GBP, EUR, CAD, AUD, JPY — held & repaid in the same foreign currency |
| Tenure | Minimum 1 year, maximum 5 years |
| Currency Risk | Zero for depositor — principal & interest returned in original foreign currency |
| Tax in India | Fully exempt under Section 10(15)(iv)(fa) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 — no TDS |
| Repatriation | Fully repatriable under FEMA — no upper limit |
| Regulatory Authority | RBI (under FEMA, 1999) — Master Directions on NRI accounts |
| Key Difference from NRE | NRE FD is in rupees (currency risk to NRI); FCNR(B) is in foreign currency (no currency risk) |
| Premature Withdrawal | No interest if withdrawn before 1 year; interest at applicable rate after 1 year |
| Tenure | SBI | HDFC Bank | ICICI Bank | Axis Bank |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 yr to < 2 yrs | 4.40%* | 3.95% | 3.85% | 4.00% |
| 2 yrs to < 3 yrs | 3.55% | 3.60% | 3.35% | 3.50% |
| 3 yrs to < 4 yrs | 3.35% | 3.65%* | 3.00% | 3.25% |
| 4 yrs to 5 yrs | 2.95% | 3.40% | 2.90% | 2.95% |
| Parameter | 2013 Scheme (Rajan Era) | 2026 Scheme (Current) |
|---|---|---|
| Context | Taper tantrum — US Fed reducing QE; rupee crashed to ₹68/$ | Sustained rupee depreciation pressure; BoP deficit ₹30.8B (6× increase) |
| Subsidy | Implicit swap — RBI bore partial hedging cost | Explicit 3–3.5% full hedging cost absorbed by RBI |
| NRI Rate Offered | ~3.5% on USD deposits | 5.5–7% on USD deposits (post full revision) |
| Inflows Attracted | $34 billion — 12% of forex reserves at time | Projected $40–60 billion |
| Duration | ~3 months window | Window: June 8 to September 30, 2026 |
| Cost to RBI | Significant — later criticised as “terrible idea” | Estimated $125 million/year — modest vs inflow benefit |
| FCNR(B) as % of GDP | ~1.8% of GDP | Could reach ~1.2–1.5% of GDP |
| Redemption Pressure | ₹26 billion maturity in 2016 caused rupee stress | Staggered maturity design to reduce redemption cliff risk |
| Feature | NRE FD | NRO FD | FCNR(B) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Currency | Indian Rupee (INR) | Indian Rupee (INR) | Foreign currency (USD, GBP etc.) |
| Currency Risk | Yes — rupee depreciation erodes return | Yes — rupee risk | None — repaid in original currency |
| Tax in India | Tax-free (interest) | Taxable (30% TDS) | Tax-free under Sec 10(15)(iv)(fa) |
| Repatriation | Fully repatriable | Restricted ($1M/year) | Fully repatriable — no limit |
| Typical Rate (2026) | 6.25–6.45% (INR) | 6–7% (INR) | 5.5–7% (USD) post-revision |
| Source of Funds | Foreign earnings only | India-source income too | Foreign earnings only |
| Act / Body | Role in FCNR(B) Scheme |
|---|---|
| RBI (Reserve Bank of India) | Regulates NRI deposits under FEMA; operates the swap window; sets interest rate ceilings; manages India’s forex reserves |
| FEMA, 1999 | Foreign Exchange Management Act — governs all NRI accounts, repatriation rights, and capital account transactions |
| Income Tax Act, 1961 — Sec 10(15)(iv)(fa) | Exempts FCNR(B) interest from Indian income tax — key incentive for NRIs; no TDS deducted |
| SEBI | Regulates NRI equity investments (FPI route); complementary to NRI deposit framework |
| Commercial Banks (SBI, HDFC, ICICI, Axis) | Accept FCNR(B) deposits from NRIs; access RBI’s swap window for hedging subsidy; revise interest rates |
| RBI Master Directions on NRI Accounts | Defines eligibility (NRI/PIO/OCI), permitted currencies, joint account rules, premature withdrawal norms |
| BoP Framework (IMF Guidelines) | FCNR(B) inflows counted under Capital Account (Banking Capital) — directly improves India’s Balance of Payments position |
BoP Crisis Signal
India’s BoP deficit widened 6× to $30.8 billion in 2025–26 — worst in recent years
Rupee Pressure
Sustained depreciation pressure; FPI outflows accelerated in 2024–25 amid US rate differentials
Forex Reserve Buffer
$34B in 2013 = 12% of total forex reserves; 2026 target could similarly rebuild the cushion
NRI Remittance Base
India is world’s largest remittance receiver (~$125B/yr); FCNR taps a different, savings-oriented NRI segment
🟢 Arguments in Favour
- Low cost vs high gain: $125M/year hedging cost for potentially $40–60B inflow — strong cost-benefit ratio
- Rupee stabilisation — dollar inflows reduce depreciation pressure without direct forex market intervention
- 2013 precedent: $34B attracted in 60 days; rupee stabilised rapidly; confidence restored
- Win for NRI savers — 6–7% tax-free USD return far exceeds global USD deposit rates (US HY savings 4–5%)
- Banks with strong NRI franchise (SBI, HDFC, ICICI) benefit through fee income & deposit growth
- Complements RBI’s other BoP measures — holistic approach rather than sole reliance on rate hikes
🔴 Concerns & Risks
- Redemption cliff risk: 2013 maturity in 2016 created $26B pressure in one year — RBI must stagger 2026 maturities carefully
- Fiscal cost: RBI’s hedging subsidy is a quasi-fiscal transfer — not free money; BoP gain shifts to future liability
- Moral hazard: Repeated use of “emergency” NRI deposit schemes may signal weak BoP management
- Rate revision lag — banks slow to transmit RBI’s subsidy; NRIs may miss the window benefit
- US-based NRIs face FBAR/FATCA obligations — compliance burden reduces net return attractiveness
- Does not address structural CAD problem — a band-aid on a systemic current account deficit
- RBI should design staggered maturity structures for 2026 FCNR(B) deposits — mandate 3–5 year tenures to avoid a repeat of the 2016 redemption cliff that stressed forex reserves after the 2013 scheme.
- Banks must rapidly transmit the hedging subsidy to NRIs through revised rates — RBI should set a clear timeline (by July 31, 2026) for banks to publish revised FCNR(B) rates of at least 5.5% on USD.
- India should use the forex reserve cushion built via FCNR(B) to reduce current account deficit structurally — through export promotion (PLI schemes, DGFT reforms) and substituting oil/gold imports.
- Simplify FBAR/FATCA compliance for US-based NRIs through India–US bilateral engagement — reducing compliance friction will unlock a large untapped NRI savings pool from the US diaspora.
- Develop a permanent NRI Financial Inclusion Framework — beyond emergency deposit drives, create incentives for NRI equity, bond, and infrastructure investment through consistent, predictable policy.
- India should pursue rupee internationalisation as a long-term BoP strategy — reducing dollar dependence through trade settlement in INR (already initiated with some nations) will reduce hedging costs structurally.
1. FCNR(B) deposits are denominated in Indian rupees and converted to foreign currency at maturity.
2. Interest earned on FCNR(B) deposits is fully exempt from income tax in India under the Income Tax Act, 1961.
3. FCNR(B) deposits can be opened only by Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) and not by Persons of Indian Origin (PIOs) or Overseas Citizens of India (OCIs).
4. Under the 2026 RBI scheme, the Reserve Bank absorbs the currency hedging cost for banks to enable them to offer higher rates on FCNR(B) deposits.
Statement 2 — Correct: Interest on FCNR(B) deposits is fully exempt under Section 10(15)(iv)(fa) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 — no TDS is deducted, and no filing is required in India for this income alone. A classic UPSC favourite.
Statement 3 — Incorrect: FCNR(B) deposits can be opened by NRIs, PIOs, and OCIs — all three categories are eligible. OCIs (who hold a foreign passport) are fully eligible even without an Indian passport. This is a common trap.
Statement 4 — Correct: Under the 2026 RBI scheme (circular dated June 5, 2026), RBI absorbs the currency hedging cost of 3–3.5% per annum for banks via a swap facility, enabling banks to offer significantly higher dollar deposit rates to NRIs.
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