Who is a Non-Resident Indian (NRI)?
A
non-resident Indian (NRI) is an Indian citizen or a person of Indian
origin who stays abroad for employment, business or vocation outside
India, or stays abroad under circumstances indicating an uncertain
duration.
Who is a Person of Indian Origin (PIO)?
A
Person of Indian Origin means a citizen of any country (other than
Bangladesh or Pakistan), if the person: (a) at any time held an Indian
passport; or (b) or the persons parents or grandparents were citizens of
India; or (c) is a spouse of an Indian citizen, or of a person referred
to in (a) or (b) above.
Other
terms with vaguely the same meaning are overseas Indian and expatriate
Indian. In common usage, this often includes Indian-born individuals
(and also people of other nations with Indian ancestry) who have taken
the citizenship of other countries.
According
to Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs, India has the second largest
diaspora in the world after Overseas Chinese . The overseas Indian
community estimated at over 25 million is spread across every major
region in the world.
Who is a Foreign Institutional Investor (FII)?
An
FII is an institution established or incorporated outside India which
proposes to invest in Indian securities and is registered with SEBI.
Who is an Overseas Corporate Body (OCB) ?
An
OCB includes overseas companies, partnership firms, societies and other
corporate bodies owned predominantly by non-resident persons of Indian
nationality or origin outside India.
Can an NRI maintain a bank account in India?
Yes. NRIs can maintain accounts in rupees as well as in foreign currency.
What types of rupee accounts may NRIs maintain?
There are 4 types:
1. Non-resident (External) Rupee Accounts (NRE)
2. Non-Resident (Special) Rupee (NRSR) Account
3. Ordinary Non-resident Rupee Accounts (NRO)
4. Non-resident (Non-repatriable) Rupee deposit accounts (NRNR)
What are NRE, NRO and FCNR accounts?
Non-Resident
(External) Rupee (NRE). This is a Rupee account from which funds are
freely repatriable. It can be opened with either funds remitted from
abroad or local funds which can be remitted abroad.
Non-Resident
Ordinary Rupee (NRO). This is a Rupee account and can be opened with
funds either remitted from abroad or generated in India. These funds are
non-repatriable. However, under certain circumstances, these are
allowed to be repatriated.
Fully
Convertible Non-Resident Rupee (FCNR). This account is similar to the
NRE account except that the funds are held in foreign currencies and can
be maintained in Pound Sterling,U.S. Dollar, Euro and Japanese Yen.
FCNR accounts can be maintained only in the form of term deposits, i.e. a
deposit kept for fixed periods ranging from 6 months to 3 years.
How do NRE, NRO and NRSR accounts differ?
Balances held in NRE accounts can be repatriated abroad freely, whereas funds in NRSR and NRO account cannot be normally remitted abroad but have to be used only for local payments in rupees. Consequently, funds remitted from abroad or local funds which can otherwise be remitted abroad to the accountholder can only be credited to NRE accounts.