Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched the Pradhan Mantri MUDRA Yojana (PMMY) in 2015 to provide low-cost credit to microfinance and non-banking financial institutions in order to lend to micro, small and medium enterprises and generate jobs and incomes in manufacturing, services, retail, agriculture and allied activities.

The Micro Units Development & Refinance Agency (MUDRA) was established as part of the exercise. Now in its 10th year, the scheme has allowed the government to fund the unfunded, PM Modi said in a written interview to ET on the scheme. Edited excerpts:

What were your expectations from the MUDRA Yojana and has it achieved them?

The MUDRA Yojana needs to be seen in a particular context and not as a standalone scheme. Even before I held any government position, I had travelled extensively across the country for many decades as a karyakarta. There was a common theme that I saw everywhere. A vast majority of our population, such as the poor, farmers, women and marginalised sections had aspirations for growth, strong spirit of enterprise, energy and resilience-all qualities needed to be a successful entrepreneur. But these were the very sections that had been completely excluded from the formal banking and financial system.Tell me, if you do not have a bank account, will you ever visit a bank? When people did not even have access to basic banking, funding for entrepreneurship looked like a distant dream.So, when the people voted for us in 2014, we decided to make the whole financial architecture people-centric and inclusive, so that we could give wings to their aspirations. We democratised the financial system.This started with 'banking the unbanked' with Jan Dhan Yojana. Once those who were left out and left behind began to become part of the formal financial system through this scheme, we went on to 'funding the unfunded' through the MUDRA Yojana and 'insuring the uninsured' through the Jan Suraksha portfolio of schemes.So, MUDRA is part of a larger vision to ensure that the entrepreneurial ability, innovation, creativity and self-reliance of the people at the grassroots is respected, celebrated and supported.Through the MUDRA Yojana, we wanted to give a message to every Indian, that we had trust in their abilities and we would stand as a guarantee in their journey to fulfil their aspirations. Trust begets trust. The people too responded with great zeal and today, with over 52 crore loans given worth ₹33 lakh crore, they have made MUDRA a massive success.

One of the concerns over the scheme has been high NPAs and consequently the underwriting burden on the government. Do these need to be addressed or would you say this is a justified cost for the impact the scheme has had?

There are two perspectives on the problem of NPAs. On the one hand, we have experience from the tenure of the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance. Then, the banking sector operated under a system that came to be known as 'phone banking'.Loans were sanctioned based on calls from political connections rather than on competence, or adherence to strict financial due diligence.We all know how this created the twin balance sheet problem. This period, marked by a lack of transparency and accountability, left public sector banks grappling with a legacy of stressed assets, undermining their ability to support broader economic growth.On the other hand, we lent money to the poor and the middle class through the MUDRA Yojana. It was designed to empower small and medium entrepreneurs who had no connections but had competence and conviction.Unlike the UPA's top-heavy lending model, MUDRA focused on grassroots economic activity. Today, with more than 52 crore loan accounts, MUDRA reflects the massive scale and ambition we had.When we launched this initiative, several prominent Congress leaders and commentators from their ecosystem said that extending credit to crores of small-scale borrowers will cause an NPA issue. They had no trust in the poor and middle class of our country. But the outcomes have defied these predictions.What stands out is the performance of these loans-just 3.5% have turned into NPAs. This is an exceptionally low default rate in this segment world over.While the UPA's phone banking era left banks burdened with toxic assets and favoured select elites of those who were close to power centres, MUDRA has redirected resources to the grassroots, fostering entrepreneurship without compromising financial stability.

The banking sector is in sound health today. Do you think it can take on more risks and fund those lacking formal credit access through schemes such as MUDRA, while corporate borrowers access funds through the bond market?

Due to our relentless banking reforms and deft handling of the NPA crisis, today, our banks are in good health again. Many of them have touched record profits.Over the last decade, programmes such as MUDRA, PM-Svanidhi and Standup India have benefited from the improving health of our banks. Further, due to these schemes, our banking system has also become more responsive towards the needs of small entrepreneurs. As a result, the poor and middle class have reduced their reliance on informal lending to a great extent.I am confident that our banking sector will continue to be a strong partner in the journey of ensuring financial inclusion and supporting entrepreneurship at the grassroots.When it comes to the question of funding small entrepreneurs or corporate borrowers, our banks are capable of supporting both segments and it is not a zero-sum game.This year our corporates raised more than ₹1 trillion through the bond market. This will continue to grow as bond markets are also maturing. Similarly, the MSMEs have started raising money through IPOs and people are appreciating that too. Indian banks will maintain an equilibrium when it comes to priority sector lending as well as corporate lending. This balanced strategy strengthens both financial stability and equitable growth, setting a sustainable path forward as the system continues to mature.

The scheme especially focused on the deprived and women.

Reaching out to the deprived has been the hallmark of this scheme. Vanchit ko variyata, mainstreaming the marginalised-this has been our motto.For decades, affordable credit used to be available only to the rich and well-connected. Unfortunately, the entrepreneurship efforts of the deprived were often trapped in the Chakravyuh of high compounding interest rates. Through MUDRA Yojana, even the deprived are able to get a loan without any collateral.So when we celebrate the success of MUDRA Yojana in promoting entrepreneurship, the heartening aspect is that a large number of these success stories are from women and deprived groups.With over 52 crore loans sanctioned, it has proved to be a lifeline for small and micro businesses in the non-corporate, non-farm sector-areas where SC, ST communities and women often operate. Half of all the loans have gone to people belonging to SC, ST, OBC communities. Nearly 70% of these loans went to women, which shows it's hitting the mark on women's empowerment and financial inclusion.For someone from a deprived background or a woman with a business idea-like a small shop or manufacturing unit such as MSME setup-this scheme has offered real support to turn dreams into reality. This is more than just an entrepreneurship opportunity for the deprived population but it is an inflection point in their lives where their conviction and ideas win over all kinds of doubts and challenges, with the government standing as the guarantor for their loans.

One of the goals of MUDRA was encouraging entrepreneurship and creating employment, especially in rural areas to discourage migration.

The MUDRA Yojana has brought about a fundamental mindset shift in society today. Entrepreneurship, which was considered somewhat of an elite endeavour, has now been democratised.Today, entry barriers to entrepreneurship, actual and perceived, have been reduced significantly and the MUDRA Yojana has been the force behind this change.Today, every layer of our society is thinking of entrepreneurship and growth. Small ideas are blossoming into MSMEs, MSMEs into successful startups and startups into unicorns.Out of the 52 crore loans given under MUDRA, over 10.6 crore have gone to first-time entrepreneurs! You have to understand that there are successful entrepreneurs who have been empowered by MUDRA Yojana in every part of the country, which means there is success in every part of the country.These new entrepreneurs have set off localised growth cycles. These new entrepreneurs are hiring more people, building bigger offices, supporting and collaborating with other businesses at a local level.Today, many youths in tier 2 or tier 3 cities prefer staying close to home rather than moving to metro cities. Low cost of housing, good education, ease of travel, ease of communication and increased avenues for entrepreneurship offer them a lucrative deal.The value addition of these entrepreneurs is being witnessed in our national growth.

How has the scheme evolved over the last decade and what next?

Let us look at the scale of the loans and the amount disbursed under the MUDRA Yojana. Over 52 crore loans worth ₹33 lakh crore have been disbursed.This means 1.6 loans have been given every second, which is faster than even a heartbeat. The total amount sanctioned is higher than the GDP of 100 countries.To give you an idea of how the scheme has progressed, an analysis of the total loans sanctioned/disbursed under the scheme shows that since its launch, the average ticket size of the loans has nearly tripled-from ₹39,000 in FY16 to ₹73,000 in FY23 to ₹1.05 lakh in FY25.In this year's budget, we have raised the upper threshold for loans to ₹20 lakh.Around MUDRA, we have worked on enhancing our digital public infrastructure as well. Beyond JAM and digital payments, we have the account aggregator (AA) framework that ensures paperless loans for everyone. With loans and ease of credit, we wanted to ensure ease of doing business online in a digital world, and therefore, we have the Open Network for Digital Commerce (ONDC). Think of it as UPI for online commerce, where entrepreneurs, especially the ones in second-tier towns and villages, will no longer be dependent on big platforms who they are compelled to share their profits with.The future of MUDRA is already before us with the AA framework and ONDC, and the first-time bank account holders a decade ago are now evolving with the economy, creating a rich credit history, which will tomorrow be beneficial for them in further expanding their business operations.

He regarded the India-led green initiatives as platforms for all nations to collectively address climate change, promote environmental sustainability, build disaster resilient infrastructure, and drive the global transition towards clean energy.

Source: The Economic Times

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India-Slovakia Joint Statement
June 15, 2026

At the invitation of His Excellency Robert Fico, Prime Minister of the Slovak Republic, His Excellency Shri Narendra Modi, Prime Minister of the Republic of India, paid a State Visit to the Slovak Republic on 15 June 2026.

The visit is the first by an Indian Prime Minister to Slovakia since its independence in 1993, marking a historic milestone and charting a new course in the enduring friendship between the two nations. Since the establishment of diplomatic relations in 1993, India and Slovakia have developed a traditional friendship and multifaceted cooperation based on trust, equality and mutual respect.

Building on the historic nature of this visit and their shared commitment to deepen bilateral cooperation, the Prime Minister of the Republic of India and the Prime Minister of the Slovak Republic agreed to elevate the relationship to a Comprehensive Partnership between the Republic of India and the Slovak Republic. The Comprehensive Partnership aims to take bilateral relations to a new level, strengthen existing cooperation mechanisms and explore new avenues for deepening cooperation, both bilaterally and multilaterally.

Recognising the growing geopolitical, economic and technological importance of the Indo-Pacific, the two leaders acknowledged the value of a stronger partnership between India and Slovakia in support of mutually beneficial cooperation, regional connectivity, open international trade, freedom of navigation, peaceful resolution of disputes and a rules-based international order.

Both leaders underscored the importance of regular high-level exchanges and sustained political dialogue, and agreed to enhance exchanges of delegations at all levels. The two sides also agreed to enhance parliamentary exchanges, contacts and cooperation with a view to promoting greater mutual understanding and sharing of legislative experiences and best practices.

The leaders reaffirmed their commitment to multilateralism, with the United Nations at its core, and to a rules-based international order, while supporting comprehensive reforms of multilateral institutions, including the United Nations, particularly the United Nations Security Council, to make them more representative, inclusive, effective and reflective of contemporary geopolitical realities. The leaders stressed on the urgent need to expand the UN Security Council in both permanent and non-permanent categories. In this context, India appreciated Slovakia’s continued support for India’s permanent membership in a reformed and expanded UN Security Council. The two leaders also agreed to continue consultations and coordination on their respective candidacies in international organisations and to exchange views and cooperate closely in global forums, including the United Nations. The two leaders also discussed the importance of upholding the global nonproliferation architecture. Slovakia reaffirmed its constructive approach to India’s membership of the Nuclear Suppliers Group.

The leaders agreed to support the development of cooperation with regional groupings such as the Slavkov 3, Visegrad 4 and 3 Seas Initiative, including interconnected and mutually beneficial infrastructure projects that promote connectivity, sustainable economic growth and regional integration. The two sides further reaffirmed their commitment to a free, open, peaceful and prosperous Indo-Pacific, based on respect for international law, sovereignty and territorial integrity, including the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.

The leaders underscored the importance of strengthening defence and security cooperation as one of the key pillars of the bilateral partnership. They agreed to encourage regular consultations and exchanges between their respective defence authorities to explore opportunities for enhanced collaboration, including in defence technologies, capacity building, research and development, and defence industrial cooperation. In this context, the leaders welcomed the signing of the Letter of Intent on Defence Cooperation between the two sides, which will foster mutually beneficial partnerships in the defence sector.

The leaders recognised the growing importance of strengthening cooperation in disaster risk reduction and resilience-building and agreed to enhance collaboration in the areas of resilient infrastructure, capacity building, knowledge sharing and institutional cooperation.

The leaders agreed to strengthen cooperation in the protection of critical information infrastructure and in preventing and countering cybercrime, while promoting an open, secure, accessible, stable, interoperable, resilient and peaceful digital space. The leaders also expressed their commitment to supporting each other in safeguarding information technology systems against emerging quantum threats to cryptography, including through preparedness for post-quantum security transitions. In this context, they noted that such cooperation would be further facilitated by the Memorandum of Cooperation signed in the field of critical infrastructure protection and postquantum cryptography.

The two leaders unequivocally condemned terrorism in all its forms and manifestations, including cross-border terrorism, and strongly condemned the heinous terrorist attack perpetrated in Pahalgam, Jammu and Kashmir, on 22 April 2025. They agreed to establish a Joint Working Group on Counter- Terrorism. They called for concerted international efforts to combat terrorism in a comprehensive and sustained manner. The leaders reaffirmed their commitment to strengthening bilateral and multilateral cooperation in counterterrorism, including within the framework of the United Nations, and called for strong and decisive action against terrorists and terrorist entities, including those designated by the United Nations Security Council 1267 Sanctions Committee, as well as their affiliates, proxies, sponsors, financiers and supporters. They further underscored the importance of holding perpetrators, organisers and sponsors of terrorist acts accountable and agreed to work closely towards the early finalisation and adoption of the Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism (CCIT) within the United Nations framework.

Welcoming the conclusion of negotiations on the India–EU Free Trade Agreement in January 2026 and the new Joint India–EU Comprehensive Strategic Agenda, the two leaders noted that the FTA will unlock new opportunities for trade and investment and called for its early signing and timely implementation to realise the full potential of trade and investment cooperation by diversifying critical value chains and opening new markets.

The leaders agreed to further strengthen the role of the India–Slovakia Joint Economic Committee in identifying and promoting high-potential areas of economic cooperation between the two countries. They also committed to exploring avenues to significantly enhance bilateral trade and two-way investment across sectors such as automotive, electronics and other advanced manufacturing industries, leveraging Slovakia’s well-developed industrial ecosystem and India’s scale, innovation ecosystem and technological capabilities, with a particular focus on high value-added collaboration.

The two sides agreed to strengthen bilateral cooperation to achieve netzero emissions, focusing on the exchange of technologies for the green energy transition and promoting clean, reliable and resilient energy systems.

The leaders agreed to enhance cooperation in the energy sector with a view to promoting energy security, sustainability and resilience through diversification of energy sources, including nuclear energy and geothermal power. They expressed their intent to deepen collaboration through joint research, exchange of expertise and capacity-building initiatives in areas of mutual interest.

The leaders agreed to strengthen cooperation in the fields of meteorology and hydrology, including through the sharing of expertise and best practices in the efficient and sustainable management of water resources and dam safety. They further expressed their intent to promote collaboration in areas such as source sustainability, rural drinking water quality monitoring, water treatment technologies, capacity building and community participation, and underscored the importance of developing climate-resilient rural drinking water infrastructure to enhance water security and ensure sustainable access to safe drinking water.

Recognising connectivity as a strategic pillar of the partnership, the two sides underscored the importance of promoting joint ventures, technology transfer, innovation and skills development in the automotive and railway sectors, with a view to enhancing competitiveness and generating new employment opportunities. They further noted the potential of Slovakia’s position as a Central European transport hub and India’s large-scale manufacturing capabilities to boost trade, investment and connectivity. They also encouraged exploring of direct air connectivity between India and Slovakia to facilitate growing economic, business and people-to-people exchanges.

The two leaders appreciated the successful outcomes of the AI Impact Summit 2026 in Delhi, attended by H.E. Mr Peter Pellegrini, President of the Slovak Republic. The two sides welcomed the signing of the Memorandum of Understanding on Digital Technologies, which will provide a structured framework for deepening cooperation in the digital domain. They agreed to further strengthen collaboration in emerging areas such as artificial intelligence, semiconductors, start-ups, innovation ecosystems, research institutions and technology companies, with a view to fostering innovation-led growth and mutually beneficial partnerships. The two sides also agreed to explore cooperation in new and emerging technologies, including 5G use cases, 6G standardisation, Internet of Things (IoT) and machine-to-machine (M2M) applications.

The two leaders agreed to explore opportunities to strengthen cooperation between their respective space ecosystems in the field of satellite technology and its applications. They also underscored the importance of fostering exchanges between scientific and research institutions, as well as industry stakeholders, to encourage innovation and the development of advanced space technologies.

The leaders highlighted the need to maintain regular dialogue and deepen cooperation in the field of healthcare, with particular emphasis on pharmaceutical research and development, digital health solutions and the strengthening of human resources for health. The two sides also underscored the importance of sharing best practices in public health management and leveraging digital technologies to build more resilient, efficient and patientcentric healthcare systems, consistent with their respective national priorities.

The two leaders agreed to encourage enhanced mobility of students, academics and researchers, with particular emphasis on STEM and humanities disciplines, in order to promote deeper educational and scientific exchanges. They took note of the existing arrangements and collaborations between higher education institutions of the two countries and encouraged their further expansion and diversification. The two sides also welcomed the conclusion of a Memorandum of Understanding between the respective Ministries of Education in the field of higher education and research, which would provide a structured framework for strengthening academic linkages and fostering long-term institutional partnerships.

The leaders agreed to further promote cultural exchanges, tourism and people-to-people contacts with a view to deepening mutual understanding and strengthening the bonds of friendship between the peoples of India and Slovakia. They emphasized the importance of expanding cultural cooperation through regular exchanges of artists and cultural troupes, the organisation of exhibitions and participation in festivals, as well as by encouraging greater tourism flows in both directions. The leaders also welcomed the signing of the Memorandum of Understanding on Audio-visual Creation, which will provide a structured framework for collaboration in film and media production and further enhance cultural connectivity between the two countries.

The leaders expressed support for the orderly, safe and legal mobility of skilled professionals. They took note of the Comprehensive Framework of Cooperation on Mobility agreed between India and the European Union in January 2026. They welcomed the signing of the Memorandum of Understanding on Cooperation in the Field of Labour Migration to facilitate mobility and promote the exchange of information between the relevant authorities of India and Slovakia. The two sides also agreed to work towards the early conclusion of a Social Security Agreement, which would contribute to safeguarding the welfare and social protection of working professionals engaged in mobility between India and Slovakia.

The leaders noted that cooperation on consular matters remained an area of continued interest to both countries, given the growing movement of people and expanding people-to-people ties. In this context, they agreed to establish a mechanism for regular consular consultations between their respective consular authorities to facilitate cooperation on consular matters.

The leaders agreed to regularly review the implementation of the Comprehensive Partnership at the appropriate functional level.

Both leaders agreed that the present visit represents a significant step forward in transforming this India-Slovakia relationship and committed to taking bilateral relations forward into a new phase of engagement.

The Prime Ministers welcomed the announcements made and the MoUs signed, which are available on the MEA website.

Prime Minister Modi thanked Prime Minister Fico and the people of Slovakia for the warm hospitality extended to him and his delegation. Both leaders agreed to maintain the momentum of high-level exchanges.