Saturday 27 October 2012

The Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999


The Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999

.The Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999
  An Act to consolidate and amend the law relating to foreign exchange with the objective of facilitating external trade and payments and for promoting the orderly development and maintenance of foreign exchange market in India.  
  BE it enacted by Parliament in the Fiftieth Year of the Republic of India as follows –
CHAPTER I
Preliminary
1- Short title, extent, application and commencement.
  (1) This Act may be called the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999.
  (2) It extends to the whole of India.
  (3) It shall also apply to all branches, offices and agencies outside India owned or controlled by a person resident in India and also to any contravention thereunder committed outside India by any person to whom this Act applies.
  (4) It shall come into force on such date as the Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, appoint: Provided that different dates may be appointed for different provisions of this Act and any reference in any such provision to the commencement of this Act shall be construed as a reference to the coming into force of that provision.
Definitions

2- In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires,
    (a) "Adjudicating Authority" means an officer authorized under sub-section (1) of section 16
    (b) "Appellate Tribunal" means the Appellate Tribunal for Foreign Exchange established under section 18;
    (c) "authorized person" means an authorized dealer, money changer, off-shore banking unit or any other person for the time being authorized under sub-section (1) of section 10 to deal in foreign exchange or foreign securities;
    (d) "Bench" means a Bench of the Appellate Tribunal;
    (e) "capital account transaction" means a transaction which alters the assets or liabilities, including contingent liabilities, outside India of persons resident in India or assets or liabilities in India of persons resident outside India, and includes transactions referred to in sub-section (3) of section 6;
    (f) "Chairperson" means the Chairperson of the Appellate Tribunal;
    (g) "Chartered accountant" shall have the meaning assigned to it in clause (b) of sub-section (1) of section 2 of the Chartered Accounts Act, 1949 (38 of 1949);
    (h) "currency" includes all currency notes, postal notes, postal orders, money orders, cheques, drafts, travelers cheques, letters of credit, bills of exchange and promissory notes, credit cards or such other similar instruments, as may be notified by the Reserve Bank;
    (i) "currency notes" means and includes cash in the form of coins and bank notes;
    (j) "current account transaction" means a transaction other than a capital account transaction and without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing such transaction includes –
      (i) payments due in connection with foreign trade, other current business, services, and short-term banking and credit facilities in the ordinary course of business,
      (ii) payments due as interest on loans and as net income from investments,
      (iii) remittances for living expenses of parents, spouse and children residing abroad, and
      (iv) expenses in connection with foreign travel, education and medical care of parents, spouse and children;
    (k) "Director of Enforcement" means the Director of Enforcement appointed under sub-section (1) of section 36;
    (l) "export", with its grammatical variations and cognate expressions, means –
      (i) the taking out of India to a place outside India any goods,
      (ii) provision of services from India to any person outside India;
    (m) "foreign currency" means any currency other than Indian currency;
    (n) "foreign exchange" means foreign currency and includes,-
      (i) deposits, credits and balances payable in any foreign currency,
      (ii) drafts, travelers cheques, letters of credit or bills of exchange, expressed or drawn in Indian currency but payable in any foreign currency,
      (iii) drafts, travelers cheques, letters of credit or bills of exchange drawn by banks, institutions or persons outside India, but payable in Indian currency;
    (o) "foreign security" means any security, in the form of shares, stocks, bonds, debentures or any other instrument denominated or expressed in foreign currency and includes securities expressed in foreign currency, but where redemption or any form of re urn such as interest or dividends is payable in Indian currency;
    (p) "import", with its grammatical variations and cognate expressions, means bringing into India any goods or services;
    (q) "Indian currency" means currency which is expressed or drawn in Indian rupees but does not include special bank notes and special one rupee notes issued under section 28A of the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 (2 of 1934);
    (r) "legal practitioner" shall have the meaning assigned to it in clause (i) of sub-section (1) of section 2 of the Advocates Act, 1961 (25 of 1961);
    (s) "Member" means a Member of the Appellate Tribunal and includes the Chairperson thereof;
    (t) "notify" means to notify in the Official Gazette and the expression "notification" shall be construed accordingly;
    (u) "person" includes –
      (i) an individual,
      (ii) a Hindu undivided family,
      (iii) a company,
      (iv) a firm,
      (v) an association of persons or a body of individuals, whether incorporated or not,
      (vi) every artificial juridical person, not falling within any of the preceding sub-clauses, and
      (vii) any agency, office or branch owned or controlled by such person;
    (v) "person resident in India" means- (i) a person residing in India for more than one hundred and eighty-two days during the course of the preceding financial year but does not include –
  (A) a person who has gone out of India or who stays outside India, in either case –
    (a) for or on taking up employment outside India, or
    (b) for carrying on outside India a business or vocation outside India, or
    (c) for any other purpose, in such circumstances as would indicate his intention to stay outside India for an uncertain period;
  (B) a person who has come to or stays in India, in either case, otherwise than –
    (a) for or on taking up employment in India, or
    (b) for carrying on in India a business or vocation in India, or
    (c) (i) for any other purpose, in such circumstances as would indicate his intention to stay in India for an uncertain period;
      (ii) any person or body corporate registered or incorporated in India,
      (iii) an office, branch or agency in India owned or controlled by a person resident outside India,
      (iv) an office, branch or agency outside India owned or controlled by a person resident in India;
    (w) "person resident outside India" means a person who is not resident in India;
    (x) "prescribed" means prescribed by rules made under this Act;
    (y) "repatriate to India" means bringing into India the realized foreign exchange and –
      (i) the selling of such foreign exchange to an authorized person in India in exchange for rupees, or
      (ii) the holding of realized amount in an account with an authorized person in India to the extent notified by the Reserve Bank, and includes use of the realized amount for discharge of a debt or liability denominated in foreign exchange and the expression "repatriation" shall be construed accordingly;
    (z) "Reserve Bank" means the Reserve Bank of India constituted under sub-section (1) of section 3 of the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 (2 of 1934);
    (za) "security" means shares, stocks, bonds and debentures, Government securities as defined in the Public Debt Act, 1944 (18 of 1944), savings certificates to which the Government Savings Certificates Act, 1959 (46 of 1959) applies, deposit receipts in aspect of deposits of securities and units of the Unit Trust of India established under sub-section (1) of section 3 of the Unit Trust of India Act, 1963 (52 of 1963) or of any mutual fund and includes certificates of title to securities, but does not include bills of exchange or promissory notes other than Government promissory notes or any other instruments which may be notified by the Reserve Bank as security for the purposes of this Act;
    (zb) "service" means service of any description which is made available to potential users and includes the provision of facilities in connection with banking, financing, insurance, medical assistance, legal assistance, chit fund, real estate, transport, processing, supply of electrical or other energy, boarding or lodging or both, entertainment, amusement or the purveying of news or other information, but does not include the rendering of any service free of charge or under a contract of personal service;
    (zc) "Special Director (Appeals)" means an officer appointed under section 18;
    (zd) "specify" means to specify by regulations made under this Act and the expression "specified" shall be construed accordingly;
    (ze) "transfer" includes sale, purchase, exchange, mortgage, pledge, gift, loan or any other form of transfer of right, title, possession or lien.
Regulation and Management of Foreign Exchange
CHAPTER II
REGULATION AND MANAGEMENT OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE
3- Dealing in foreign exchange, etc.
  Save as otherwise provided in this Act, rules or regulations made thereunder, or with the general or special permission of the Reserve Bank, no person shall –
    (a) deal in or transfer any foreign exchange or foreign security to any person not being an authorized person;
    (b) make any payment to or for the credit of any person resident outside India in any manner;
    (c) receive otherwise through an authorized person, any payment by order or on behalf of any person resident outside India in any manner. Explanation.-For the purpose of this clause, where any person in, or resident in, India receives any payment by order or on behalf of any person resident outside India through any other person (including an authorized person) without a corresponding inward remittance from any place outside India, then, such person shall be deemed to have received such payment otherwise than through an authorized person;
    (d) enter into any financial transaction in India as consideration for or in association with acquisition or creation or transfer of a right to acquire, any asset outside India by any person. Explanation.-For the purpose of this clause, "financial transaction" means making any payment to, or for the credit of any person, or receiving any payment for, by order or on behalf of any person, or drawing, issuing or negotiating any bill of exchange promissory note, or transferring any security or acknowledging any debt.
4- Holding of foreign exchange, etc.
  Save as otherwise provided in this Act, no person resident in India shall acquire, hold, own, possess or transfer any foreign exchange, foreign security or any immovable property situated outside India.
5- Current account transactions.
  Any person may sell or draw foreign exchange to or from an authorized person if such sale or drawal is a current account transaction: Provided that the Central Government may, in public interest and in consultation with the Reserve Bank, impose such reasonable restrictions for current account transactions as may be prescribed.
6- Capital account transactions.
  (1) Subject to the provisions of sub-section (2), any person may sell or draw foreign exchange to or from an authorized person for a capital account transaction.
  (2) The Reserve Bank may, in consultation with the Central Government, specify –
    (a) any class or classes of capital account transactions which are permissible;
    (b) the limit up to which foreign exchange shall be admissible for such transactions: Provided that the Reserve Bank shall not impose any restriction on the drawal of foreign exchange for payments due on account of amortization of loans or for depreciation of direct investments in the ordinary courts of business.
  (3) Without prejudice to the generality of the provisions of sub-section (2), the Reserve Bank may, by regulations, prohibit, restrict or regulate the following –
    (a) transfer or issue of any foreign security by a person resident in India;
    (b) transfer or issue of any security by a person resident outside India;
    (c) transfer or issue of any security or foreign security by any branch, office or agency in India of a person resident outside India;
    (d) any borrowing or lending in rupees in whatever form or by whatever name called;
    (e) any borrowing or lending in rupees in whatever form or by whatever name called between a person resident in India and a person resident outside India;
    (f) deposits between persons resident in India and persons resident outside India;
    (g) export, import or holding of currency or currency notes;
    (h) transfer of immovable property outside India, other than a lease exceeding five years, by a person resident in India;
    (i) acquisition or transfer of immovable property in India, other than a lease not exceeding five years, by a person resident outside India;
    (j) giving of a guarantee or surety in respect of any debt, obligation or other liability incurred 


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Corruption laws in India


Corruption laws in India

Corruption laws in India
Public servants in India can be penalized for corruption under the Indian Penal Code, 1860 and
the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988.  The Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988
prohibits benami transactions.  The Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 penalises public
servants for the offence of money laundering.  India is also a signatory (not ratified) to the UN
Convention against Corruption since 2005.  The Convention covers a wide range of acts of
corruption and also proposes certain preventive policies.
Key Features of the Acts related to corruption
Indian Penal Code, 1860:  
• The IPC defines “public servant” as a government employee, officers in the military,
navy or air force; police, judges, officers of Court of Justice, and any local authority
established by a central or state Act.
• Section 169 pertains to a public servant unlawfully buying or bidding for property.  The
public servant shall be punished with imprisonment of upto two years or with fine or
both.  If the property is purchased, it shall be confiscated.
• Section 409 pertains to criminal breach of trust by a public servant.  The public servant
shall be punished with life imprisonment or with imprisonment of upto 10 years and a
fine.
The Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988
• In addition to the categories included in the IPC, the definition of “public servant”
includes office bearers of cooperative societies receiving financial aid from the
government, employees of universities, Public Service Commission and banks.
• If a public servant takes gratification other than his legal remuneration in respect of an
official act or to influence public servants is liable to minimum punishment of six months
and maximum punishment of five years and fine.  The Act also penalizes a public servant
for taking gratification to influence the public by illegal means and for exercising his
personal influence with a public servant.
• If a public servant accepts a valuable thing without paying for it or paying inadequately
from a person with whom he is involved in a business transaction in his official capacity,
he shall be penalized with minimum punishment of six months and maximum
punishment of five years and fine.
• It is necessary to obtain prior sanction from the central or state government in order to
prosecute a public servant.
The Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988    
• The Act prohibits any benami transaction (purchase of property in false name of another
person who does not pay for the property) except when a person purchases property in his
wife’s or unmarried daughter’s name. • Any person who enters into a benami transaction shall be punishable with imprisonment

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Richard Branson



Richard Branson

Richard Branson is the founder of the Virgin Group and companies such as Virgin Atlantic, Virgin America, Virgin Mobile and Virgin Active. He is the author of "Business Stripped Bare: Adventures of a Global Entrepreneur."



Sir Richard Charles Nicholas Branson is an English business magnate, best known for his Virgin Group of more than 400 companies. His first business venture was a magazine called Student at the age of 16. Wikipedia
Born: July 18, 1950 (age 62), Blackheath, London
Net worth: 4.2 billion USD (2012)
Education: Stowe School
Spouse: Joan Templeman (m. 1989), Kristen Tomassi (m. 1972–1979)
Children: Sam Branson, Clare Sarah Branson, Holly Branson
Movies and TV shows: The Rebel Billionaire: Branson's Quest for the Best, More



He's ballooned across the Atlantic, floated down the Thames with the Sex Pistols, and been knighted by the Queen. His megabrand, Virgin, is home to more than 250 companies, from gyms, gambling houses and bridal boutiques to fleets of planes, trains and limousines. The man even owns his own island.
And now Richard Branson is moving onward and upward into space (tourism): Virgin Galactic's Philippe Starck-designed, The first Burt Rutan-engineered spacecraft, The Enterprise, completed its first captive carry in early 2010 and is slated to start carrying passengers into the thermosphere in 2012, at $200,000 a ticket.
Branson also has a philanthropic streak. He's pledged the next 10 years of profits from his transportation empire (an amount expected to reach $3 billion) to the development of renewable alternatives to carbon fuels. And then there's his Virgin Earth Challenge, which offers a $25 million prize to the first person to come up with an economically viable solution to the greenhouse gas problem.



Warren Buffett


Warren Buffett


Warren Buffett is an investing icon, and many individuals want to know where to find a Warren Buffet biography to learn more about the man. This task is not hard to accomplish because there are many biographies from different sources that are available. Some are located online and are available free of charge. The subject is so popular that even Wikipedia has an entry on Warren Buffett that details parts of his life and career.

A quick online search will reveal many websites that offer information on Warren Buffett, and some offer a full biography for free. Other websites may offer a partial biography for free but charge for the full version. Online bookstores may offer this coverage in book format, and delivery can usually be arranged within a few days. There are several unauthorized biographies by different authors, and each version may have different stories and types of content.
Finding a Warren Buffett biography is not difficult to do. Most local bookstores in the area will carry at least one of these books in stock. Some bookstores will order a specific title if it is not carried at no additional charge and the book will normally be available within a week or so. This method can also be used for books that Warren Buffett recommends for new investors as well.

Some mail order book clubs offer biographies, and these clubs will usually carry at least one biography of Warren Buffett because of his status in the investment world. In some cases the high popularity of these books may make them available in back order status only. Many stores and online merchants report that any books concerning Warren Buffett are hard to keep on hand because the volumes sell out so fast.
Some business magazines have compiled short versions of a Warren Buffett biography, and these may be available for ordering or can usually be found online for purchase or download. Some second hand stores may have the back issues of the magazines that featured a bio on the man and the cost is usually more than reasonable. No matter which methods are used in the search finding biographies about Buffett is a snap, because he is a very popular subject around the globe.


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Narendra Modi ( Cheif minister of Gujrat State)


Narendra Modi ( Cheif minister of Gujrat  State)


He exposed  those within his own party who, however encouraging or protective, do not line themselves up on behalf of his self-projection as a prime ministerial candidate;   LK Advani, characteristically, made  contradictory noises, citing the approbation of Modi by an American Congressional Research cell, but also saying that the BJP has many worthwhile candidates. What else is his nth rath yatra meant to hint if not that? Notice that despite a directive from the RSS that he publicly renounce  that ambition if his yatra is to have support from RSS cadres, Advani has not made any explicit declaration to that effect.  As to Sushma Swaraj and Arun Jaitley, much as they do not wish to lose the Modi vote-bank, they are intelligent enough to know that the BJP will not have a hope in hell in any general election in a multi-religious, multi-ethnic, multi-caste  Indiawith Modi at the helm of any campaign.

He obliged  the BJP’s  chief ally, the JD(U) to make the most elaborate statement yet since 2002  on how  Modi’s  culpabilities with regard to the 2002 carnage cannot be wished away, and how he failed to rise to his oath and accountability to the secular-constitutional regime, rubbing in the peception that a Modi who has failed to  govern 5 crore Gujaratis may hardly be trusted to steer an India of some 125 crore citizens of mind-bogling plurality (see Shivanand Tiwari’s statement, The Hindu, Sept,19). 

Modi drew the clarification from the AIADMK supremo that the party’s  participation is limited only to the subject of communal harmony, and should not be read into beyond that point; the show also  brought into stark focus the absence of the Shiv Sena from the  Modi event, as the Shiv Sena supremo expressed his scepticism about Modi's  attempt to turn away from his laudable USP, namely, hardcore Hindutva. After all, Advani did fall grievously between two stools consequent upon his praise-Jinnah manoeuvre, a piece of cunning from which he never did recover.

Modi allowed the rival Congress party to mount a telling counter in the shape of a “footpathi”  upvaas, shorn of frills and lucre, “placing” by contrast the Modi  show for what it is, a  super rich PR exercise and gigantic waste of public money which has no  space for the little men and women of Gujarat; not that this well-thought riposte will amount to much unless the Congress and other secular forces build on it in the months to come, foregrounding both  a credible critique of Modi's record and movements based on hard livelihood issues.  What is new is that withinGujaratthere is now  a greater audience for such things than before, and in no small measure due to Modi's  cavalier, Caligula-style  self-projection.

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