India’s Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY), launched in April 2015, stands as one of the world’s largest collateral-free micro-credit programmes. By extending loans up to ₹10 lakh (recently raised to ₹20 lakh in some categories) to non-corporate, non-farm micro and small enterprises, Mudra Loans aim to “fund the unfunded.” The scheme targets street vendors, artisans, small shopkeepers, and rural entrepreneurs who lack formal collateral or credit history. Its three categories—Shishu (up to ₹50,000), Kishore (₹50,001–₹5 lakh), and Tarun (₹5–10 lakh)—cater to different stages of business growth. Over a decade, Mudra has become a cornerstone of India’s financial inclusion drive, promising to convert job-seekers into job-creators and fuel grassroots self-employment.
The programme’s role in fostering self-employment is
both visible and transformative at the micro level. By removing the collateral
barrier and routing loans through banks, regional rural banks, microfinance
institutions, and NBFCs, Mudra has brought millions into the formal banking
fold. Women constitute roughly 65-70 per cent of beneficiaries, while a
significant share goes to new entrepreneurs, SC/ST/OBC communities, and rural
areas. Official claims highlight that the scheme has enabled small-scale
manufacturing, trading, and service activities that generate incremental income
and local employment. A typical Mudra borrower might expand a tailoring unit,
start a kirana store, or invest in livestock, thereby creating one or two
additional family or neighbourhood jobs. In semi-urban and village economies,
these enterprises reduce distress migration to cities and strengthen local
supply chains. Supporters argue that the sheer volume—over 52 crore loan
accounts in ten years—has democratised entrepreneurship, shifting mindsets from
salaried dependence to self-reliance. Studies and field reports consistently
note improved household incomes, asset creation, and women’s economic agency,
with many beneficiaries reporting higher savings and better living standards.
In essence, Mudra acts as a bridge between formal credit and India’s vast
informal economy, where over 90 per cent of employment historically resides
outside organised sectors.
The magnitude of Mudra Loans is staggering by any
global standard. Cumulative sanctions have crossed ₹39 lakh crore, with
disbursements nearing ₹32 lakh crore. In recent fiscal years alone, annual
disbursals have hovered between ₹5-6 lakh crore, touching record highs in
certain quarters. To contextualise, India’s nominal GDP stands at approximately
₹330-350 lakh crore. Thus, the cumulative Mudra portfolio already equals
roughly 10 per cent of current GDP, spread over a decade of lending. This scale
dwarfs most international microfinance initiatives and reflects an
unprecedented policy push to channel credit to the bottom of the pyramid. The
average ticket size has also grown—from around ₹40,000 in early years to over
₹1 lakh recently—indicating that borrowers are graduating to larger
enterprises. Such volumes have undoubtedly boosted consumption and investment
at the grassroots, contributing to inclusive growth metrics and helping sustain
demand even during economic slowdowns.
Yet this very magnitude carries substantial risks for
broader economic growth. Collateral-free lending at this scale introduces moral
hazard: borrowers may over-leverage without skin in the game, while banks,
reassured by government refinance and guarantees, might relax due diligence.
When loans turn sour, the burden ultimately falls on public-sector banks (which
disburse the majority) and, by extension, the taxpayer through
recapitalisation. High volumes can also crowd out productive credit to larger
firms or infrastructure, distorting capital allocation. If entrepreneurial
skills, market linkages, or infrastructure lag behind credit availability, many
loans finance consumption or low-productivity activities rather than
sustainable businesses. This can lead to over-indebtedness cycles, where
borrowers juggle multiple loans, eroding repayment discipline and weakening
household balance sheets. At a macro level, unchecked expansion risks inflating
asset prices in rural and semi-urban markets or creating localised credit
bubbles that burst during monsoons, pandemics, or commodity shocks, thereby
dragging down overall growth.
Consider the hypothetical scenario where Mudra-style
lending reaches 10 per cent of GDP on an annual or outstanding basis. Such a
threshold would represent an extraordinary credit impulse—equivalent to
injecting trillions of rupees yearly into micro-enterprises. While it could
supercharge self-employment and consumption in the short run, the risks
multiply. Banking system stability would be tested: even modest default rates
would generate non-performing assets (NPAs) in the range of tens of thousands
of crores, necessitating massive government bailouts and diverting fiscal
resources from health, education, or infrastructure. Credit growth of this
order might fuel inflation in wage goods or rural land prices, erode monetary
policy transmission, and expose the economy to systemic shocks.
Internationally, no major economy has sustained micro-credit at such relative
scale without facing repayment crises or fiscal strain. In India’s context, it
could exacerbate inequality if benefits accrue unevenly to politically
connected borrowers while genuine entrepreneurs struggle with high interest
costs and recovery pressures. Ultimately, growth might stall as banks become
risk-averse post-crisis, credit flows dry up, and investor confidence erodes.
The scale of non-performing loans under Mudra
underscores these vulnerabilities. Official figures place NPAs at around 2 per
cent of total disbursed amounts, a seemingly manageable level praised as among
the lowest globally for this segment. However, when measured against
outstanding loans, the ratio has climbed sharply—to nearly 9.8 per cent by
March 2025, up from 5.5 per cent in 2018. In absolute terms, even conservative
estimates imply thousands of crores in stressed assets, concentrated in
public-sector banks. Rising trends reflect challenges such as inadequate
borrower training, external shocks like demonetisation and COVID-19, and
occasional political loan-waiver signals that undermine repayment culture.
While not yet catastrophic, the upward drift signals that rapid expansion
without commensurate hand-holding can erode asset quality, forcing banks to
provision more capital and slow fresh lending elsewhere.
Lessons from microfinance experiments worldwide offer
sobering guidance. The global microcredit movement, once hailed as a poverty
panacea after Muhammad Yunus’s Nobel Prize, has repeatedly encountered
boom-and-bust cycles. In Bangladesh and India’s Andhra Pradesh, explosive
growth led to multiple borrowing, coercive recovery practices, and borrower
suicides, culminating in state-level moratoriums and collapsed repayment rates.
Similar crises erupted in Morocco, Bosnia, Nicaragua, and Pakistan, where
over-indebtedness triggered mass defaults and regulatory crackdowns. Common
pitfalls included weak credit bureaus allowing clients to borrow from dozens of
lenders, aggressive scaling by profit-driven institutions, and neglect of
financial literacy or market viability. Even successful models, such as early
Grameen Bank, later required reforms to curb over-lending. In the United States
and other developed contexts, micro-loans have survived only with ongoing
subsidies and robust consumer protections, revealing that technology and
competition alone cannot eliminate risks of exploitation or low impact. The
overarching lesson is clear: micro-credit excels at inclusion but rarely
delivers transformative poverty reduction without complementary investments in
skills, infrastructure, regulation, and repayment discipline. Unbridled
expansion often substitutes one form of vulnerability (lack of credit) with
another (debt traps), ultimately harming the very poor it seeks to empower.
In conclusion, Mudra Loans have undeniably expanded self-employment opportunities, formalised millions of tiny enterprises, and injected dynamism into India’s informal economy. Their unprecedented magnitude has accelerated financial inclusion and grassroots entrepreneurship on a scale few nations have attempted. However, the attendant risks—rising NPAs, potential banking stress, misallocated capital, and the spectre of systemic fragility if lending scales further relative to GDP—cannot be ignored. The world’s microfinance history warns that credit alone is no substitute for holistic development. For Mudra to sustain its contribution to economic growth, India must pair aggressive lending with stronger credit assessment, mandatory skill-building, real-time credit bureaus, and counter-cyclical safeguards. Only then can the scheme evolve from a bold inclusion tool into a resilient engine of inclusive, sustainable prosperity. The challenge lies not in scaling credit, but in ensuring it creates genuine, viable livelihoods rather than fragile debt dependencies.