The Sunday Guardian

40.82 CR MUDRA LOANS APPROVED IN 8 YEARS, 70% FOR WOMEN-RUN BUSINESSES

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creators.” According to a 2013 NSSO survey, India comprised 5.77 crore small/micro units, wherein a majority were sole proprietor­ships/own account enterprise­s, which employed 12 crore people. Of the total small/micro units, 60% were owed by people from Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Other Backward Classes. However, due to low credit availabili­ty, which was mostly generated from informal lenders such as friends and relatives, the government decided to provide micro/small business units with access to institutio­nal finance to help create a significan­t potential for small businesses to generate employment opportunit­ies and drive the country’s economic growth.

The PM MUDRA is structured to meet both term loan and working capital components of financing for income generating activities in manufactur­ing, trading and service sectors, including activities allied to agricultur­e such as poultry, dairy, beekeeping, etc. The loans have been divided into three categories based on the need for finance and stage in maturity of the business. These are Shishu (loans up to Rs 50,000), Kishore (loans above Rs 50,000 and up to Rs 5 lakh), and Tarun (loans above Rs 5 lakh and up to Rs 10 lakh).

The PMMY data shows women entreprene­urs accounting for 68% of accounts under the scheme while 51% of accounts belong to entreprene­urs of SC/ST and OBC categories. Every five seconds, loans worth Rs 5 crore are disbursed under PM Mudra. Of the more than 40.82 crore loans, approximat­ely 21% has been sanctioned to New Entreprene­urs and 83% loans have been provided to micro units/enterprise­s in Shishu category. The Small Industries Developmen­t Bank of India has disbursed Rs 636.89 crore to MLIS for onward credit of subvention amount into accounts of borrowers. About eight crore beneficiar­ies are first time entreprene­urs. The programme has created nearly 41 crore entreprene­urs.

The loans are provided by member lending institutio­ns (MLIS) which include banks, non-banking financial companies (NBFCS), micro finance institutio­ns (MFIS) and other financial intermedia­ries. The rate of interest is decided by lending institutio­ns in terms of RBI guidelines. In case of working capital facility, interest is charged only on money held overnight by borrower.

The PMMY also serves the financial inclusion agenda of the government through three pillars—banking the unbanked, securing the unsecured and funding the unfunded which is being implemente­d with the objective to provide access to credit for small entreprene­urs. The three objectives are being achieved through leveraging technology and adopting multi-stakeholde­rs’ collaborat­ive approach. To further this objective, the government has extended interest subvention of 2% on prompt repayment of Shishu loans for a period of 12 months to all eligible borrowers and an overdraft loan amount of Rs 5,000 has been enhanced to Rs 10,000 since September 2018 and sanctioned under Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY) accounts.

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