World Bank Approves $500 Million Program to Strengthen
Performance of MSMEs in India
The World
Bank’s Board of Executive Directors today approved a $500 million program to support
the Government of India’s nationwide initiative to revitalize the MSME sector, which
has been heavily impacted by the COVID-19 crisis. The program targets improvements
in the performance of 555,000 MSMEs and is expected to mobilize financing
of $15.5 billion, as part of the government’s $3.4 billion MSME Competitiveness
– A Post-COVID Resilience and Recovery Programme (MCRRP).
The
$500 million Raising and Accelerating Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise (MSME)
Performance (RAMP) Program is the World Bank’s second intervention
in this sector, the first being the $750
million MSME Emergency Response Program, approved in July 2020 to address
the immediate liquidity and credit needs of millions of viable MSMEs severely impacted
by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. To date, 5 million firms have accessed finance
from the government program. With the program approved today, the World Bank's financing
towards improving the productivity and financial viability of the MSME sector amounts
to $1.25 billion over the past year.
Having
supported the immediate liquidity and credit needs of viable MSMEs in the first
phase, the RAMP Program will support the Government of India’s efforts to increase
MSME productivity and financing in the economic recovery phase, crowd in private
sector financing in the medium term, and tackle long-standing financial sector issues
that are holding back the growth of the MSME sector.
The MSME
sector is the backbone of the country’s economy, contributing 30 percent of India’s
GDP and 40 percent of exports. Out of some 58 million MSMEs in India, more than
40 percent lack access to formal sources of finance.
“The
MSME sector, a critical backbone of India’s economy, has been hard hit by the Covid-19
pandemic,” said Junaid Ahmad, World
Bank Country Director in India. “The RAMP program will intensify efforts
to support firms to return to pre-crisis production and employment levels, while
laying the foundations for longer-term productivity-driven growth and generation
of much-needed jobs in the MSME sector.”
The World
Bank Group, including its private sector arm the International Finance Corporation
(IFC), will support the MSME sector by:
• Strengthening
institutional capacity and coordination
At the
national level, MSME policies and programs are implemented across ministries and
departments, including key players such as the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the
Small Industries and Development Bank of India (SIDBI). There are also myriad state-level
initiatives with limited coordination amongst them. There is a need for “convergence”
of policies, programs, and schemes at all levels.
To bring
about this fundamental shift, the program will help setup a high-level MSME Council
to enable better coordination between national and state-level programs. State level Strategic Investment Plans (SIPs) will provide a roadmap
and measurable metrics; enhance the capacity of the MSME ministry to design, implement
and assess policies and programs through innovative digital platforms data systems; support integrated portals to deliver online cost-effective
MSME services at scale; and create a more decentralized, flexible and cohesive program
that responds to the local context and challenges to MSME growth.
• Supporting
firm capabilities and access to markets and finance
The RAMP
program will provide better access to finance and working capital for MSMEs by strengthening
the receivable financing markets; and scale-up online dispute resolution mechanisms
to address the problem of delayed payments. Such efforts are expected to improve
the cost-effectiveness, quality, accessibility, impact, and outreach of such schemes.
The program
will promote technology-based solutions, green investments, and access to services
for women-headed businesses. It will also build partnerships with the private sector
as service providers to reach greater scale.
“The
MSME sector in India faces several challenges. There is need to strengthen access
to formal sources of financial and non-financial services, including of women headed
MSMEs, and strengthen coordination in the national and state MSME support programs.
Given the magnitude and geographical spread across the country, direct interventions
can be prohibitively costly,” said Peter Mousley, Lead Private Sector Specialist and World Bank’s Task
Team Leader for the program. “The RAMP program will support the Government’s
MCRRP objective of providing a more comprehensive and coordinated Centre-State approach
to improve MSME sector productivity, reduce the gender gap, and promote more environmentally
sustainable investments.”
In addition
to national level activities, the program will initiate targeted activities in five
“first mover” states – Gujarat, Maharashtra, Punjab, Rajasthan, and Tamil Nadu
with the potential of additional states joining the Program going forward.
The $500
million loan from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD),
has a maturity of 18.5 years including a 5.5-year grace period.