Govt clears Rs 20K crore credit guarantee scheme for fund flow to microfinance institutions

Update: 2026-03-20 19:01 GMT

Mumbai: The government on Friday approved a limited-period Rs 20,000-crore credit guarantee scheme to aid microfinance institutions (MFIs), which have been complaining about challenges in accessing funds.

The Credit Guarantee Scheme for Microfinance Institutions- 2.0 (CGSMFI-2.0) will cover loans disbursed by member lending institutions (MLIs), including banks and other lenders to non-banking finance company-MFIs and MFIs till end-June, the government-run National Credit Guarantee Trustee Company (NCGTC) said in a circular.

It can be noted that the MFIs, which serve people at the bottom of the pyramid, have been facing challenging times due to a surge in non-performing assets (NPAs), which has, in turn, made their lenders wary of extending further exposure.

The NCGTC said MLIs shall provide funding to the MFIs or NBFC-MFIs, as per their assessment, for on-lending to eligible small borrowers and also put certain conditions on interest rates.

To qualify for the benefits under the credit guarantee scheme, the interest rate on the loans sanctioned by MLIs to NBFC-MFIs/MFIs is capped at External Benchmark Lending Rate (EBLR) or 1-Year marginal cost of funding based lending rate plus two per cent, it said.

Additionally, the MFIs’ lending to small borrowers has to be done at a cost of 1 per cent below the average rate of their lending in the last six months.

Other conditions include having a maximum loan tenure of three years, which includes a one year moratorium and two years for loan repayment. Also, the MLIs need to ensure that at least 5 per cent of their total loan amount under the scheme is sanctioned to MFIs classified as small-sized with less than Rs 500 crore of assets under management, 10 per cent to midsized ones (Rs 500-2,000 crore of AUM).

“The maximum amount of loan which can be sanctioned by MLIs to NBFC- MFIs/MFIs shall be capped at 20 per cent of AUM of respective NBFC-MFI/MFI subject to a maximum of Rs 100 crore to small size, Rs 200 crore to medium size and Rs 300 crore to large size NBFC-MFIs/MFIs,” the circular said.

Microfinance Institutions Network (MFIN), a self-regulatory body for the industry, welcomed the move as a timely intervention to address the challenges faced by the sector, which will help unlock liquidity. 

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