Why in the news
The Ministry of MSME released its 2025–26 sector review highlighting landmark milestones: 8.7 crore Udyam registrations, CGTMSE completing 25 years, and MSME contributions reaching 31.1% of GDP and 48.58% of exports. The review exposes the central challenge — formalisation and credit access have expanded rapidly, but equity capital, market linkages, and structural inclusion for marginalised entrepreneurs remain uneven.
What is the scale and economic significance of India’s MSME sector, and what structural gaps persist despite aggregate growth?
- Economic footprint (January 2026 data): MSMEs contribute 31.1% of GDP, 35.4% of manufacturing output, and 48.58% of exports. With 38.9 crore employed, the sector is the second-largest employment source after agriculture.
- Definition revision (April 2025): The government revised MSME classification thresholds based on investment and turnover, giving enterprises greater room to scale without losing policy support — addressing a longstanding cliff-edge disincentive to growth.
- Formalisation reach: Udyam and Udyam Assist registrations crossed 8.7 crore as of June 2026, expanding access to institutional finance and government schemes for previously informal enterprises.
- Persistent equity gap: Debt-based credit schemes have scaled, but equity capital essential for MSMEs seeking to move beyond micro-scale remains structurally limited. The SRI Fund (Fund of Funds) has reached only 761 enterprises with ₹2,851 crore as of May 2026, a narrow footprint relative to sector size.
How has credit access for MSMEs been restructured, and what constraints remain in reaching the smallest enterprises?
- CGTMSE expansion: The Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises approved 29.03 lakh guarantees worth ₹3.77 lakh crore (January–November 2025). The guarantee ceiling was raised from ₹5 crore to ₹10 crore, enabling larger collateral-free support.
- Digital Credit Assessment Model: A new model reduces dependence on traditional collateral and balance-sheet assessment, improving access for first-generation and informal-origin entrepreneurs who lack formal credit histories.
- PMEGP reach: The Prime Minister’s Employment Generation Programme has supported 10.84 lakh micro-enterprises with ₹29,623 crore in margin money subsidies, generating employment for over 97 lakh people since inception. Applications are now available in 19 regional languages (since June 2025).
- Remaining constraint: Guarantee schemes address debt access but not enterprise viability. MSMEs without bankable cash flows common among artisan and rural enterprises — remain outside the formal credit architecture despite formalisation.
How are technology adoption and quality certification being embedded into the MSME ecosystem?
- ZED Certification (Zero Defect Zero Effect): Over 93.61 lakh MSMEs registered and 6.68 lakh certified as of May 2026. The framework promotes quality manufacturing with minimal environmental impact — aligning MSME output with global supply chain standards.
- LEAN Manufacturing: Over 65,647 enterprises registered and 18,961 certified under the Lean Manufacturing scheme. Adoption of globally recognised lean practices reduces waste and raises operational efficiency.
- Technology Centre network: 18 existing Technology Centres, 25 operational Extension Centres (trained 53,963 youth), and 9 World Bank-supported centres (trained 59,357 individuals, assisted 1,520 MSMEs as of November 2025). An additional 20 Technology Centres and 100 Extension Centres are under development.
- IPR facilitation: Intellectual Property Facilitation Centres have approved 191 patents, 807 trademarks, 99 designs, and 6 GI registrations building a thin but growing innovation asset base within the sector.
How effectively is MSME policy reaching marginalised groups artisans, SC/ST entrepreneurs, women, and the North East?
- PM Vishwakarma: The scheme covers 18 traditional trades and reached its four-year registration target of 30 lakh beneficiaries in two years. Over 24 lakh completed basic skill training; ₹5,133 crore in collateral-free loans sanctioned to 5.98 lakh beneficiaries.
- National SC/ST Hub: Public procurement from SC/ST-owned enterprises rose from ₹99 crore (2015–16) to ₹3,731 crore (2024–25). SC/ST-owned MSEs accounted for 1.93% of total public procurement as of December 2025, progress visible but far below proportional representation.
- Women entrepreneurship: At the 44th IITF 2025, over 67% of MSME stalls were allotted to women entrepreneurs a market access intervention, though stall allocation does not translate directly into sustained commercial scale.
- North East promotion: 73 projects approved under the NER & Sikkim scheme (total cost ₹114.37 crore, government assistance ₹89.60 crore), targeting manufacturing, testing, packaging, skilling, and tourism infrastructure. Eight new projects were approved in Assam and Meghalaya in 2025.
- SFURTI (traditional industry clusters): 513 clusters approved, 376 functional as of June 2026, benefiting 3.03 lakh artisans. Cluster-based organisation addresses market linkage and tool access — the structural gaps that individual artisan support cannot solve.
Do the governance and grievance redressal mechanisms match the scale of the MSME sector’s delayed payment and dispute burden?
- MSME Samadhaan Portal: 2,56,892 applications received involving ₹55,244 crore in claims as of June 2026. Only 58,148 cases disposed — a 22.6% resolution rate, revealing a large unresolved claims backlog despite the portal’s existence.
- CHAMPIONS Portal: 39,494 grievances received in 2025–26; 39,387 resolved a 99.72% disposal rate. High throughput here contrasts sharply with Samadhaan’s backlog, suggesting delayed payments are the deeper structural problem, not general grievance handling.
- Online Dispute Resolution (ODR) Portal: Newly launched to reduce delayed payments through technology-enabled dispute resolution. Effectiveness is yet to be demonstrated at scale.
- Public procurement monitoring: The MSME Sambandh Portal tracked ₹31,443 crore in CPSE procurement during FY 2026–27 (as of June 2026), with 54.51% sourced from MSEs across 29,769 enterprises. Mandatory procurement targets create market access but do not resolve the downstream payment delay problem.
Conclusion
India’s MSME sector has achieved significant formalisation and credit access milestones — but the policy architecture still addresses inputs (registrations, guarantees, skilling) more effectively than outcomes (enterprise viability, market competitiveness, equitable inclusion). The delayed payment backlog on Samadhaan, the narrow reach of equity capital under the SRI Fund, and the 1.93% SC/ST share in public procurement collectively indicate that expansion of the formal enterprise base has not yet translated into structural economic empowerment. For Viksit Bharat 2047, the MSME agenda must shift from formalisation as an end to commercialisation and sustained enterprise growth as the measure of success.