RBI working on avenues for Russian counterparts’ INR use


RBI Working on Avenues for Russian Counterparts' INR Use


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Key RBI Circular A.P. (DIR Series) Circular No. 10, dated 11 July 2022
Mechanism Special Rupee Vostro Account (SRVA) — held by foreign (Russian) correspondent bank at an authorised Indian bank
Account Currency Indian Rupee (INR)
Eligible Transactions All exports and imports denominated, invoiced, and settled in INR
Repatriation SRVA balance can be repatriated in freely convertible currency OR currency of beneficiary country
Administering Body RBI — Foreign Exchange Department
Statutory Basis Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999
Policy Goal Internationalisation of INR; reduce USD dependency
Key Official (2026) N Senthil Kumar, Chief General Manager, RBI Foreign Exchange Dept
Forum Russia-India Forum, Mumbai, March 2026
Avenues being explored (i) Settling Russian imports from India; (ii) Capital investments in India
Scope Framework applicable to any partner country, not Russia alone

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Economic / Internationalisation of INR

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The RBI's circular permitting International Trade Settlement in INR was issued on 11 July 2022 (Circular No. RBI/2022-2023/90). [S3][S2]
  2. The operative account mechanism for INR trade settlement is the Special Rupee Vostro Account (SRVA) held by a foreign bank at an authorised Indian bank. [S3]
  3. FEMA, 1999 is the primary statutory basis governing SRVA and INR trade settlement. [S3]
  4. RBI's Foreign Exchange Department (not the Department of Payment & Settlement Systems) administers the INR trade settlement framework. [S1]
  5. The framework is applicable to any partner country, not exclusively Russia. [S3]
  6. N Senthil Kumar, Chief General Manager, RBI Foreign Exchange Department, made the March 2026 statement at the Russia-India Forum. [S1]
  7. The Russia-India Forum (March 2026) was held in Mumbai (not Delhi). [S1]
  8. SRVA balances can be repatriated in freely convertible currency or the currency of the beneficiary country. [S3]
  9. In August 2024, India and Russia explored a dynamic rupee-rouble rate mechanism to bypass USD as the reference currency. [S8]
  10. The RBI IDG Report on Internationalisation of INR provided the strategic roadmap for expanding INR in global trade. [S11]
  11. Russian entities making capital investments using SRVA balances must additionally comply with India's FDI policy (DPIIT / FEMA NDI Rules 2019). [Statutory]
  12. Russia is classified as a country sharing a land border with India — making certain FDI sectors subject to the government approval route. [Statutory]
  13. The PIB announcement enabling INR settlement under Foreign Trade Policy export promotion schemes was issued by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. [S4]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II India's bilateral relations — India-Russia; Effect of policies and politics of developed/developing countries on India's interests
GS-III Indian Economy — External sector, Balance of Payments, currency management; Internationalisation of Rupee
GS-III Effects of globalisation on Indian economy; Technology & economic development

Plausible Mains Questions:

  1. "The accumulation of Indian Rupees by Russia's trade counterparts presents both an opportunity and a challenge for India's monetary diplomacy. Critically examine the avenues RBI is exploring and the structural constraints therein." (GS-III)

  2. "India's decision to settle trade in Indian Rupees with sanctioned economies reflects strategic autonomy but raises questions about currency stability and capital account management. Analyse." (GS-II / GS-III)

  3. "Discuss the significance of Special Rupee Vostro Accounts (SRVA) in the internationalisation of the Indian Rupee. What are the key policy and regulatory challenges in making INR a truly international currency?" (GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Internationalisation of Indian Rupee (RBI IDG Report) Direct parent framework; SRVA and INR trade mechanisms flow from this roadmap
India-Russia Bilateral Trade Relations Context for why INR accumulation by Russia has reached significant levels
FEMA, 1999 and Capital Account Convertibility Statutory basis; understanding what INR investment by foreigners legally entails
India's Foreign Trade Policy 2023-28 Links export promotion to INR settlement; Commerce Ministry dimension
Western Sanctions on Russia (SWIFT exclusion) Why Russia prefers alternative settlement currencies and avoids USD/EUR
BRICS and De-dollarisation Debate Broader geopolitical context in which INR internationalisation sits
Current Account Deficit and External Sector Management Understanding rupee depreciation risks from large-scale SRVA liquidation
FDI Policy (DPIIT / FEMA NDI Rules 2019) Regulatory gate for Russian entities making capital investments using INR balances

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong Ministry: The SRVA/INR trade framework is administered by RBI (Foreign Exchange Dept) — NOT by the Ministry of Finance or Ministry of Commerce directly, though they are policy stakeholders.
  2. Date confusion: The enabling circular is July 2022 (not 2023 or 2024). The March 2026 statement is about expanding avenues, not about creating the framework.
  3. Russia-specific misconception: The INR trade settlement framework is not exclusive to Russia — it applies to any willing partner country; Russia is the most prominent user due to sanctions dynamics.
  4. SRVA vs. Vostro Account: A regular Vostro Account is held in any currency; an SRVA is specifically INR-denominated — the distinction matters for MCQs on banking/forex.
  5. Land border FDI rule trap: Russia does share a land border with India (via the Russia-China-India geography, though not directly — NOTE: Russia does NOT directly share a land border with India; the land border FDI rule applies to China, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar). Russian FDI is not automatically in the government approval route on land border grounds — do not conflate Russia with China in FDI context.

11. Sources