Why RBI Is Reviving the FCNR(B) Swap Scheme to Attract Foreign Inflows
The RBI is weighing a revival of the FCNR(B) deposit swap scheme to attract foreign currency and support the rupee. The same tool brought in about $26 billion during the 2013 taper-tantrum episode.
Amid pressure on the rupee, the Reserve Bank of India is considering reviving a tool it last used effectively in 2013: a special swap facility for Foreign Currency Non-Resident (Bank) deposits, known as FCNR(B) deposits. These are fixed-term deposits that Non-Resident Indians, Persons of Indian Origin and Overseas Citizens of India can hold in foreign currency, without having to convert their money into rupees.
The idea works like this: the RBI offers banks a subsidy on the foreign currency they raise through these deposits and takes on part of the exchange-rate risk. This lets banks offer attractive interest rates to depositors abroad, encouraging a large inflow of foreign currency that strengthens the rupee and rebuilds confidence.
When the scheme was used in 2013 — during the 'taper tantrum', when expectations of US Federal Reserve tightening shook emerging-market currencies — it brought in about $26 billion and helped stabilise the rupee. Notably, the move was controversial even then: it shifts currency risk onto the central bank, which is why some economists have always viewed it sceptically.
For exam purposes, the key takeaways are the definitions of FCNR(B), NRI/PIO/OCI deposit categories, and the concept of a currency swap as a tool the RBI can use to manage external-sector stress.
Key Points to Remember
- FCNR(B) = Foreign Currency Non-Resident (Bank) deposits, held in foreign currency by NRIs/PIOs/OCIs
- RBI subsidises banks and absorbs part of the exchange-rate risk to attract inflows
- The 2013 version drew about $26 billion and stabilised the rupee
- Used as a tool to manage external-sector and currency pressure
- Criticised for shifting currency risk onto the central bank
Exam Relevance
Relevant for UPSC Prelims (Economy — External Sector, NRI Deposits), Banking exams (RBI tools, deposit types), and other competitive exams.
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