Government announces ₹497 crore relief package for exporters amid war disruptions

Amid logistics disruptions from the West Asia war, the government announced a ₹497 crore relief package for exporters on Thursday. Named RELIEF, it includes three components enhancing ECGC credit insurance and supporting MSMEs.

Amid concerns over the Strait of Hormuz and the West Asia war, the commerce ministry announced a ₹497 crore relief package called RELIEF (Resilience & Logistics Intervention for Export Facilitation) for exporters on Thursday. It covers consignments to West Asian countries including UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Israel, Qatar, Oman, Bahrain, Iraq, Iran, and Yemen, for delivery or transshipment. > Exporters with existing ECGC credit insurance from February 14 to March 15 get up to 100% additional risk coverage beyond their current policy. > Those planning shipments in the next three months receive government support for up to 95% additional ECGC coverage. > MSMEs facing extra freight and insurance surcharges without prior coverage qualify for partial reimbursement, up to ₹50 lakhs per exporter, subject to conditions, verification, and ceilings. > “This support will be extended subject to prescribed conditions, documentary verification and notified ceilings (up to ₹50 lakhs per exporter).” The package forms part of the ₹25,060 crore Export Promotion Mission (EPM) 2026-31, aimed at mitigating logistics disruptions, protecting exporter confidence, preventing order cancellations, and safeguarding jobs. ECGC Ltd, under the commerce ministry, handles implementation. > “RELIEF has been structured to provide support across the export cycle by covering the shipments already left during the disruption period as well as prospective exports planned to the affected region.”

Labaran da ke da alaƙa

French minister announces €70M aid to transport, fishing, and farming sectors amid fuel crisis; collage of affected workers.
Hoton da AI ya samar

Government allocates 70 million euros to sectors hit by fuel price surge

An Ruwaito ta hanyar AI Hoton da AI ya samar

The French government announced a 70 million euro support plan on Friday evening for road transporters, fishermen, and farmers hit by energy price hikes from the Middle East conflict. Valid for April and renewable monthly, it provides targeted sectoral aid without worsening the public deficit. Sector reactions are mixed.

India's commerce ministry on Monday restored full duty benefits under the RoDTEP scheme for exporters affected by West Asia war disruptions, effective March 23, 2026. This reverses a February decision halving rebate rates amid fiscal constraints. The step supports exporters facing maritime trade volatility.

An Ruwaito ta hanyar AI

India’s goods trade deficit narrowed to $20.67 billion in March from $21.69 billion a year earlier, data from the Commerce and Industry Ministry showed. The easing came amid a West Asia crisis that curbed petroleum imports and exports to the region. Goods exports for FY26 rose 1% to $441 billion.

The Reserve Bank of India's Monetary Policy Committee on Wednesday kept the key policy rate, the repo rate, unchanged at 5.25 per cent. Amid uncertainties from the West Asia conflict, the committee retained its neutral stance. It has lowered the GDP growth forecast to 6.9 per cent for FY27.

An Ruwaito ta hanyar AI

Building on earlier concerns over GDP growth projections, the escalating West Asia war is pressuring Indian equity markets and disrupting footwear and textile sectors through supply shortages and cost spikes. Prashant Jain of 3P Investment Managers views the impact as marginal and transient, while industry reports show input costs up 10-50%.

India's economy could face challenges from the West Asia conflict, which may impact oil prices and overall growth. According to Crisil Intelligence, real GDP growth is expected to reach 7.1 percent in FY27, driven by consumer spending and investment. Exports are anticipated to increase, while retail inflation might climb to 4.3 percent.

An Ruwaito ta hanyar AI

India's banking system liquidity surplus has narrowed to ₹75,483 crore amid advance tax outflows of Rs 2 lakh crore and forex market interventions. Money market rates rose as a result, leading the Reserve Bank of India to conduct a repo operation. Economists estimate the RBI sold over $15 billion to support the rupee.

 

 

 

Wannan shafin yana amfani da cookies

Muna amfani da cookies don nazari don inganta shafin mu. Karanta manufar sirri mu don ƙarin bayani.
Ƙi