Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Covid-19 toll on MSMEs: 1 in 4 running below half its capacity

91% units restart operations, though more than half face liquidity crunch

- Saubhadra Chatterji letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Nine out of every 10 of India’s 63.3 million small businesses (termed micro, small, and medium enterprise­s or MSMEs) have restarted operations after the lockdown necessitat­ed by Covid-19, but only one in four is producing at least half its capacity -- largely on account of poor demand, logistical issues, and their own financial troubles (at least half said they faced a liquidity crunch as of August 1).

“85% of MSME units operate from households and as their exposure to formal banking is almost zero, they are not able to take the benefit of the Centre’s liquidity package, which is linked to outstandin­g bank credit. The government should come out with a separate fund or fast-track MUDRA [Micro Units Developmen­t & Refinance Agency Ltd] loan for these people. For bigger MSMEs, e-marketing should be strengthen­ed and a special fund for technology upgradatio­n is required as many MSMEs want to invest heavily in technology,” said Tamal Sarkar, executive director of Foundation for MSME Cluster.

And as of August 6, four million MSMEs had been sanctioned around 140,000 crore under the Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme announced as part of the government’s ~20 lakh crore relief package, of which around ~95,000 crore had been disbursed.

The numbers highlight the toll the pandemic and the lockdown imposed to slow its spread (while the national lockdown ended on May 31, localised lockdowns continue across many parts of India as cases continue to rise) has taken on what is popularly described as the backbone of Indian industry -- MSMEs.

The numbers are part of a presentati­on made by the ministry of MSMEs this week, and based on a survey conducted by National Small Industries Corporatio­n.

India’s small businesses employ around 110 million people and accounted for almost half of India’s exports in 2019-20. According to the presentati­on, they also account for around 30% of GDP.

“If the MSME can’t produce, big industries would not be able to survive in India. To give just one example, India is the world’s largest producer of bicycles and 98% of bicycle parts are made by MSMEs. They are also a cost-effective way of production as one MSME’s scrap is raw material for another. The government must do everything to turn it around to revive the Indian industry,” said Gurmeet Singh Kular, president of Federation of Industrial & Commercial Organizati­on (FICO).

To be sure, the August survey (around 3,100 MSMEs responded) show an improvemen­t over the July and June ones. For instance, in June, only 18.2% of MSMEs were producing more than 50% of their capacity; and in June 70% of MSMEs said they faced a liquidity crunch.

“One cannot talk of last month or August only but have to start from the beginning. In April and May, there was almost total closure, no [availabili­ty of] labour, no liquidity. June onwards, there is tremendous improvemen­t, especially after the Atmanirbha­r Bharat package was put in place in mid-May. To be precise, from mid-March to entire April, [there] was almost total closure and the sector started opening only from May,” said the spokespers­on of the ministry of micro, small and medium enterprise­s.

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