To curb gold imports and monetise large idle stocks of the precious metal, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Saturday announced three schemes, including redeemable gold bonds which will carry a fixed rate of interest.

The Minister proposes to introduce a gold monetisation scheme, which will replace both the present gold deposit and gold metal loan schemes.

“The new scheme will allow the depositors of gold to earn interest in their metal accounts and the jewellers to obtain loans in their metal account. Banks/other dealers would also be able to monetize this gold,” Mr. Jaitley said in his Budget speech.

India is one of the largest consumers of gold in the world and imports as much as 800-1,000 tonnes of gold each year.

Though stocks of gold in India are estimated to be over 20,000 tonnes, mostly this gold is neither traded, nor monetised, the Finance Minister said.

He also proposed to develop an alternate financial asset, a Sovereign Gold Bond, as an alternative to purchasing metal gold.

“The bonds will carry a fixed rate of interest and also be redeemable in cash in terms of the face value of the gold, at the time of redemption by the holder of the bond,” he said.

The move would also help in containing trade deficit and current account deficit (CAD), the net difference between outflows and inflows of foreign currencies. It had peaked to 6.7 per cent of GDP in the third quarter of 2012-13.

He added that the government would commence work on developing an Indian Gold Coin, which will carry the Ashok Chakra on its face.

The coin would help reduce the demand for coins minted outside India and also help to recycle the gold available in the country,” he added.

As per the Economic Survey, the CAD is expected to fall below 1 per cent in the next fiscal on the back of easing of global commodity prices including petroleum products.

Gold imports in January has declined to 38 tonnes from 142 tonnes in April 2014. In 2012-13, the country had imported 845 tonnes.

Reduction in gold imports has brought down the trade deficit to $118.37 billion during April-January this fiscal.

Original source: The Hindu

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