By Dr Dipesh Shah

 

The Government of India implemented a major fi­nancial sector reform by establishing the country’s maid­en International Financial Ser­vices Centre (IFSC) in GIFT City, Gujarat. The IFSC has been de­veloped as a unique international financial jurisdiction within on­shore India, which has been des­ignated as a non-resident zone under the Foreign Exchange Management (FEM) Act. This special status enables financial transactions to be carried out in any of the fifteen foreign curren­cies notified, including USD, GBP, Euro and Yen.

 

The IFSC has been set up with two primary objectives, namely: —

a) Onshoring India-centric international financial services business, and,

b) Serve as a preferred gateway for channeliz­ing global capital flows into and out of the coun­try.

 

Over the last few years, GIFT IFSC has made remarkable progress in positioning itself as a ‘New Age Global Financial Cen­tre,’ providing an ideal platform for the global financial services industry to integrate more effi­ciently with the Indian economy. A key landmark in IFSC’s journey so far has been the establishment of the International Financial Services Centres Authority (IF­SCA) as a unified statutory body for the development and regula­tion of IFSCs in India. Since Oc­tober 2020, IFSCA has assumed its statutory powers and has noti­fied over 29 regulations and more than 14 frameworks encompass­ing the entire spectrum of finan­cial services, including banking, capital markets, insurance, the fund industry, fintech, aircraft leasing, ship leasing, and glob­al corporate treasury centres. The Government endeavours to develop GIFT IFSC as an inter­nationally recognized financial centre with trusted business reg­ulations, competitive tax regime and ease of doing business.

 

Today, the GIFT IFSC initia­tive is a testament to India’s firm resolve to undertake bold and transformative reforms in the financial sector. This ambitious project is envisaged to catalyze global capital flows into the coun­try and accelerate the integra­tion of the Indian economy with the global financial ecosystem. As of July 2024, more than 600+ entities across banks, capital markets, insurance, fintech, air­craft leasing, ship leasing, bullion exchange, etc., have been regis­tered with the IFSCA. The finan­cial service market is gaining momentum with the healthy and growing participation of global and domestic financial services institutions. The business growth in some of the key sectors is high­lighted below:

 

Banking Sector: The Bank­ing ecosystem in GIFT IFSC is rapidly evolving with a healthy mix of foreign and domestic banks, primarily catering to the foreign currency borrowing re­quirements of Indian corporates and public sector enterprises through external commercial borrowing, trade finance, etc. Transactions under these heads, previously booked from overseas financial centres, are now being booked out of GIFT IFSC. As of March 2024, the total asset size of IFSC Banking Units (IBUs) crossed USD 60 billion, and the cumulative value of transactions undertaken by IBUs crossed USD 795 billion.

 

Fund Industry: The growth of a robust fund industry in GIFT IFSC has a transformative im­pact in catalyzing global capital inflows into India, including for the start-up ecosystem. Previ­ously, the pooling of international capital for investments in India was structured through funds (private equity, venture capital, hedge funds, etc.) set up in off­shore jurisdictions. Now, with en­abling regulations, a competitive tax regime, and beneficial cost of operations, GIFT IFSC is emerg­ing as a preferred jurisdiction for the pooling of global capital by foreign and Indian fund manag­ers. In the last three years, there has been rapid growth in Fund Management Entities (FMEs) and Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs) registered with IF­SCA. The cumulative FMEs and funds registered rose from 39 and 33 in September 2022 to 114 and 120, respectively, in March 2024.

 

Aircraft Leasing: The avi­ation industry in India is on the cusp of unprecedented growth, with a strong order book of more than 1,500+ aircraft placed by Indian airlines and a projected demand for over 2,200 aircraft by 2042. Currently, most aircraft operated by Indian airlines are leased from offshore lessors that have access to competitive cap­ital costs. The aircraft leasing and financing business, the most profitable segment in the aviation value chain, was entirely residing in foreign jurisdictions. Recog­nizing the immense potential of aircraft leasing and financing business, IFSCA introduced the enabling leasing framework, and the Government supported the endeavour by providing several tax incentives. In three years, green shoots have been visible in IFSC, and more than 28 air­craft lessors have already been registered. These have leased more than 120 + aviation assets, including commercial aircraft, helicopters, aircraft engines and ground support equipment.

 

Foreign universities initi­ative: The IFSC, being an off­shore jurisdiction, is uniquely positioned to become an ‘Inter­national Higher Education Hub’ by attracting top-quality interna­tional universities that are keen on exploring India for its talent and demographic profile. IFSCA achieved a significant milestone in FY24 when Australia’s Deak­in University became the first foreign university to be granted final registration for their Inter­national branch campus in GIFT IFSC under IFSCA (setting up and operation of international branch campus and offshore edu­cation centres) Regulation, 2022. University of Wollongong of Aus­tralia became the second foreign university to receive in-principal approval for their international branch campus in GIFT IFSC.

 

Global In-House Centres: Globally, information technology and digital practices have facil­itated the cross-border flow of services such as - accounting, au­diting, taxation, and book-keep­ing and have fuelled the growth of Global In-House Centres (GIC). GIFT IFSC is uniquely positioned to offer such services to global clients. A leading US institution, Bank of America, has already set up a large GIC unit in GIFT IFSC, which provides in-house support services to the bank’s global operations. Several oth­er international firms are now looking at the GIC opportunity in GIFT IFSC.

 

In the future, GIFT IFSC is slated to play a significant role in achieving the vision of a de­veloped India@2047.

 

Dr Dipesh Shah is Execu­tive Director (Development) at International Financial Servic­es Centres Authority (IFSCA), GIFT City

 

(Views expressed in the article belong solely to the author).