Nepal Bans Import Of Betel Nut, Pea, Peppercorn, Dried Date Amid Depleting Forex Reserves

Nepal Bans Import Of Betel Nut, Pea, Peppercorn, Dried Date Amid Depleting Forex Reserves

KATHMANDU, Oct 4 (NNN-XINHUA) – The Nepali government has banned the import of betel nut, pea, peppercorn and dried date temporarily, as the country is facing dwindling foreign exchange reserves, amid surging imports.

The central bank confirmed the ban in a notice last night, stating that, it would not provide any foreign exchange facilities for the import of the goods, as requested by the Department of Commerce Supplies and Consumer Protection.

“The commerce department wrote to us asking not to provide foreign exchange facilities, for the imports of these goods, as they are under the prohibited list for imports,” Dev Kumar Dhakal, spokesperson for Nepal Rastra Bank, told Xinhua. “Based on this request, we issued a circular in the name of banks, not to provide any foreign exchanges for the import of these items.”

The Nepali government banned the import of these goods in Mar, 2020, to save foreign exchange reserves, due to a potential loss of remittances amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Remittances are the largest source of foreign exchange earnings for Nepal.

In Mar this year, the government allowed the import of the goods till mid-July, by setting limit on their quantities.

The central bank was alarmed to see depleting foreign exchange reserves, as a result of less remittances and surging imports. In the first month of the current 2021-22 fiscal year, starting in mid-July, Nepal’s foreign exchange reserves decreased to 11.42 billion U.S. dollars from 11.75 billion dollars, as imports grew by 75.7 percent to 150.73 billion Nepali rupees (1.26 billion dollars) during the period, according to the bank.

Imports grew by 75.86 percent to 314.51 billion rupees (2.64 billion dollars) during the second month of the current fiscal year, the Department of Customs said.

Remittances have become vital for the country, since tourism has been hit hard by the pandemic, but money sent from abroad has fallen by 17.5 percent to 638.2 million dollars, said the central bank.

“The time has not come to be more alert about the foreign exchange situation, and take certain control measures to stop the fast depletion of foreign exchange reserves,” said Dhakal.– NNN-XINHUA

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