Diaspora: Remittance limit increased to Rs 10 lakh for India

In a notification, the Home Ministry also said if the remitted amount exceeds Rs 10 lakh, the recipients will now have 90 days to inform the government instead of 30 days earlier.

New Delhi: If you are living abroad and want to support your family back home, you can remit Rs 10 lakh without seeking any permission or informing authorities. Earlier, the limit to remit money home was Rs one lakh.

According to the Union Home Ministry  notification, rules concerning Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act (FCRA) has been amended  to revise the limits for remittances. Under the FCRA, the new limit has been fixed at Rs 10 lakh. Money can be remitted to relatives in India.  in a year from relatives staying abroad without informing the government of India.

In a notification, the Home Ministry also said if the remitted  amount exceeds Rs 10 lakh,  the recipients will now have 90 days to inform the government instead of 30 days earlier.

The new rules, Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Rules, 2022, have been notified by the Home Ministry through a gazette notification on Friday night.

“In the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Rules, 2011, in rule 6, — for the words “one lakh rupees”, the words “ten lakh rupees” shall be substituted; and for the words “thirty days”, the words “three months” shall be substituted,” the notification said.

Rule 6 deals with intimation of receiving foreign funds from relatives.

It stated earlier that “any person receiving foreign contribution in excess of Rs 1 lakh or equivalent thereto in a financial year from any of his relatives shall inform the central government (details of funds) within 30 days from the receipt of such contribution”.

Similarly, making changes in rule 9, which deals with application of obtaining ‘registration’ or ‘prior permission’ under the FCRA to receive funds, the amended rules have given individuals and organisations or NGOs 45 days to inform the Home Ministry about bank account (s) that are to be used for utilisation of such funds. This time limit was 30 days earlier.

The Central Government has also ‘omitted’ provision ‘b’ in rule 13, which dealt with declaring foreign funds including details of donors, amount received, and date of receipt, etc., every quarter on its website.

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Now, anyone receiving foreign funds under the FCRA will have to follow the existing provision of placing the audited statement of accounts on receipts and utilisation of the foreign contribution, including income and expenditure statement, receipt and payment account and balance sheet for every financial year beginning on the first day of April, within nine months of the closure of the financial year, on its official website or on the website as specified by the Centre.

A provision where an NGO or an individual receiving foreign funds had to declare such contributions every quarter on its official website has also been done away with.

In case of change of bank account, name, address, aims or key members of the organisation (s) receiving foreign funds, the home ministry has now allowed 45 days’ time to inform it, instead of previous 15 days.

The Home Ministry had made the FCRA rules tougher in November 2020, making it clear that NGOs which may not be directly linked to a political party but engage in political action like bandhs, strike or road blockades will be considered of political nature if they participate in active politics or party politics.

The organisations covered under this category include farmers’ organisations, students, workers’ organisations and caste-based organisations.

In the amended FCRA, the government barred public servants from receiving foreign funding and made Aadhaar mandatory for every office-bearer of NGOs.

The new law also says that organisations receiving foreign funds will not be able to use more than 20 percent of such funds for administrative purposes. This limit was 50 per cent before 2020.

According to the law, all NGOs receiving funds have to be registered under the FCRA.

The amended rules have been lauded by members of the Indian Diaspora saying that these were needed keeping in view the depreciating value of Indian rupee as well as growing global inflation.

Prabhjot Singh

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