36 Lakh Jobs, 4 Lakh Enterprises, ₹13,554 Crore: The Real Numbers Behind India’s MSME Job Story May 8, 2026 MSME Sampark Msme News 0 Numbers from government reports often arrive without context — large, impressive-sounding, and somehow abstract. So let’s put this one in perspective. Between FY22 and FY26, MSME Ministry schemes — primarily the Prime Minister’s Employment Generation Programme (PMEGP) — created more than 36 lakh jobs. In the same period, over 4 lakh new enterprises were established and ₹13,554 crore was disbursed. That is not a statistic. That is 36 lakh people with a livelihood who may not have had one otherwise. What PMEGP Actually Is The Prime Minister’s Employment Generation Programme is a credit-linked subsidy scheme that helps individuals set up new micro enterprises in non-farm sectors. It provides a margin money subsidy — between 15% and 35% of the project cost depending on the category and location — while the remaining amount comes from a bank loan. The target beneficiaries are educated unemployed youth, traditional artisans, and rural entrepreneurs who have a skill or a business idea but lack the capital to start. PMEGP is not a handout. It is a combination of a subsidy and a loan that together reduce the financial barrier to starting a business low enough for first-generation entrepreneurs to clear. Where the Growth Is Coming From The strongest results have been in rural India. This is significant because rural entrepreneurship has traditionally been starved of capital, mentorship, and market access. Government schemes like PMEGP, when effectively implemented, have the potential to create economic activity in places where private capital rarely flows. The growth in self-employment — as opposed to salaried employment — is also worth noting. In an economy where formal job creation has been under pressure, the expansion of self-employment through MSME formation is a meaningful alternative route to income and economic participation. The Honest Assessment 36 lakh jobs over four years is impressive. But India’s working-age population grows by roughly 1.2 to 1.5 crore people every year. The MSME sector needs to absorb a significant portion of that growth — and the schemes, while effective, need to continue scaling. The ₹13,554 crore disbursed is also a measure of execution. It means the money didn’t just get allocated — it was actually put to work. That is not always a given with government programmes. The direction is right. The scale needs to keep growing. Popular Articles Msme News Debroy’s Demise: A Monumental Loss for Indian MSMEs, Says FISME Msme News Government Should Be First Customer of Startups, Says Amitabh Kant Msme News India Gets Temporary Relief as US Postpones Tariffs Msme News Prospects Brightening for MSMEs in ITeS, Shows CRISIL SME Tracker Msme News AI for MSMEs: Bridging the Gap Between Technology and Business Goals Msme News India and UK Sign Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) Msme News Govt launches 100cr Mutual Guarantee Scheme for MSMEs Msme News Coimbatore MSMEs Appeal to Government Against Proposed Steel Import Duty Hike Msme News India Is Using Its BRICS Chair Moment to Fight for Small Businesses Msme News National MSME Survey Aims to Unlock Growth and Global Competitiveness
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