What Happened
- Union Budget 2026-27 proposed topping up the Self Reliant India (SRI) Fund with an additional ₹2,000 crore to continue providing risk capital support to micro enterprises.
- The top-up ensures sustained equity financing access for micro-enterprises that are typically unable to access formal equity markets or attract private venture capital.
- The Budget envisioned "Corporate Mitras" — large corporate mentors — to guide micro enterprises and integrate them into larger value chains alongside the SRI Fund.
- Complementary measures: a new ₹10,000 crore SME Growth Fund for high-potential firms, and TReDS expansion mandated for Central Public Sector Enterprises to improve MSME liquidity.
Static Topic Bridges
Self Reliant India (SRI) Fund — Structure and Purpose
The Self Reliant India Fund was announced in the Aatmanirbhar Bharat Package (2020) and operationalised in 2021, with a corpus of ₹50,000 crore to infuse equity capital into viable micro, small, and medium enterprises. The fund operates through a Mother Fund – Daughter Fund structure: NSIC Venture Capital Fund Limited (NVCFL) acts as the Mother Fund (registered as a Category-II Alternative Investment Fund with SEBI in September 2021), which invests into daughter funds that in turn make equity or quasi-equity investments in MSMEs. The Government of India contributes ₹10,000 crore, with the remaining ₹40,000 crore expected from private equity and venture capital funds.
- Fund structure: Fund of Funds (Mother Fund: NVCFL under NSIC; Daughter Funds: private PE/VC managers)
- Total corpus: ₹50,000 crore (GOI: ₹10,000 crore; Private: ₹40,000 crore)
- Investment type: Equity or quasi-equity into MSMEs with growth potential, helping them graduate from micro to small/medium
- Since inception (2021), total equity infusion reached ₹4,885 crore (GOI contribution: ₹529.40 crore) — indicating slow uptake requiring fresh push
- Registered under SEBI AIF Category-II regulations
Connection to this news: The ₹2,000 crore Budget top-up is specifically targeted at micro enterprises — the smallest segment that faces the most acute equity gap — to sustain momentum and expand coverage following sluggish initial deployment.
MSME Ecosystem and the Equity Gap Challenge
India's MSME sector comprises approximately 6.3 crore enterprises (as per Udyam registrations), contributing about 30% of GDP, 45% of exports, and employing over 11 crore people. However, MSMEs — especially micro-enterprises — are predominantly debt-financed through informal sources and face a structural equity gap. Banks and NBFCs offer collateral-backed credit; equity and risk capital remain inaccessible for the vast majority because they lack audited financials, formal governance structures, or the scale to attract institutional investors.
- MSME classification (revised 2020): Micro — investment up to ₹1 crore + turnover up to ₹5 crore; Small — ₹10 crore / ₹50 crore; Medium — ₹50 crore / ₹250 crore
- Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises (CGTMSE): provides collateral-free credit guarantee to banks for loans up to ₹5 crore — primarily debt, not equity
- Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS): provided collateral-free loans to MSMEs during COVID-19 — again, debt instrument
- Equity instruments like SRI Fund are rare and address a market failure: venture capital does not flow to micro-enterprises due to ticket size and return horizon constraints
Connection to this news: The ₹2,000 crore top-up and the new "Corporate Mitras" ecosystem recognise that equity capital alone is insufficient — mentorship, market linkages, and value chain integration are equally critical for micro-enterprises to graduate to the next scale tier.
Aatmanirbhar Bharat and the Make in India Ecosystem
Aatmanirbhar Bharat (Self-Reliant India), articulated by Prime Minister Modi in May 2020, is built on five pillars: Economy, Infrastructure, System (technology-driven), Vibrant Demography, and Demand. The SRI Fund is a financial instrument within the MSME pillar of this broader framework, designed to make Indian manufacturing globally competitive by building resilient domestic supply chains. The Budget 2026 ₹2,000 crore top-up explicitly positions it within the Aatmanirbhar Bharat mission as part of the government's continued push to reduce import dependence and build domestic manufacturing capacity.
- Make in India (launched September 2014): promotes manufacturing across 25+ sectors; PLI (Production Linked Incentive) Schemes are its flagship execution tool
- Udyam portal (launched 2020): simplified digital MSME registration replacing earlier Udyog Aadhaar — has over 6.3 crore registered enterprises
- CHAMPIONS portal (Creation and Harmonious Application of Modern Processes for Increasing the Output and National Strength): single-window grievance and handholding platform for MSMEs
- National MSME Policy: under formulation to provide regulatory and financial policy certainty
Connection to this news: The Budget's comprehensive MSME package — SRI Fund top-up + SME Growth Fund + TReDS expansion + Corporate Mitras — signals a transition from emergency support (pandemic-era) to structural ecosystem building for competitiveness.
Key Facts & Data
- SRI Fund corpus: ₹50,000 crore (GOI: ₹10,000 crore + Private PE/VC: ₹40,000 crore)
- SRI Fund launched: 2021 under Aatmanirbhar Bharat package (2020)
- Mother Fund: NSIC Venture Capital Fund Limited (NVCFL), SEBI Category-II AIF, registered September 2021
- Equity infused since inception: ₹4,885 crore (GOI share: ₹529.40 crore)
- Budget 2026 top-up: ₹2,000 crore specifically for micro enterprises
- Companion measures: SME Growth Fund (₹10,000 crore), TReDS mandate for CPSEs, CGTMSE-backed invoice discounting
- MSME share in India's GDP: ~30%; exports: ~45%; employment: 11+ crore
- MSME classification revised in 2020 (investment + turnover dual criteria)