These interventions are designed to address key
challenges faced by Indian exporters, promote broad-based and inclusive export
growth, and strengthen India’s position as a globally competitive export
powerhouse. Commerce
Secretary, Shri Rajesh Agarwal, also graced the occasion.
Addressing the gathering on the occasion of World Day
of Social Justice, Shri Goyal said that social justice requires reaching the
last person at the bottom of the pyramid. He emphasised that inclusive growth,
empowerment of the marginalised and providing opportunities to those left
behind in India’s rapid transformation are essential to achieving true social
justice.
The Minister
highlighted India’s growing leadership in emerging technologies and global
partnerships. Referring to the recently concluded AI Summit, he commended Prime
Minister Shri Narendra Modi and the concerned Ministers for positioning India
at the centre of global conversations on artificial intelligence and future
technologies. He stated that advancements in artificial intelligence, machine
learning, quantum computing, data centres and indigenous large language models
would open significant opportunities for India’s youth and catalyse investments
across sectors.
Shri Goyal underlined that India’s expanding network
of Free Trade
Agreements (FTAs) has significantly enhanced market access for
Indian exporters. He noted that nearly 70 per cent of global GDP and two-thirds
of global trade are now accessible to India through nine concluded FTAs,
including the first tranche of the Bilateral Trade Agreement with the United
States. These agreements provide preferential access across sectors in 38
developed and emerging economies.
The Minister stated that India today engages with
developed economies with confidence, safeguarding sensitive sectors while
securing gains in areas of competitive strength. Since 2022, India has
accelerated trade engagements, expanded partnerships in goods, services and
investments, reduced compliance burdens, decriminalised several laws and
improved ease of doing business. He also referred to India’s successful hosting
of the G20 Summit across multiple cities, showcasing the country’s diversity
and economic potential.
Emphasising that the benefits of global trade must
reach every MSME, startup and entrepreneur, Shri Goyal said the Export
Promotion Mission is aimed at promoting new products, services and exporters,
while enabling Indian businesses to access new markets. He noted that India has
recorded double-digit growth in merchandise exports in the first half of
February, reflecting strong market confidence and proactive industry
participation.
He stated that the Mission seeks to simplify processes
for MSMEs, strengthen access to credit, enhance quality standards, support
compliance with international regulations and expand logistics and warehousing
infrastructure globally. Initiatives such as overseas warehousing, including
Bharat Mart in Dubai, are intended to provide Indian exporters with strategic
access to markets across the GCC, Africa, Central Asia and Europe…The Mission is implemented by the Department of
Commerce in coordination with the Ministry of MSME, Ministry of Finance, EXIM
Bank, Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises (CGTMSE),
National Credit Guarantee Trustee Company Limited (NCGTC), regulated lending
institutions, Indian Missions abroad, EPCs and industry stakeholders.
The newly launched
interventions aim to address structural constraints faced by MSMEs, including
high cost of capital, limited access to diversified trade finance instruments,
compliance burdens in international markets, logistics disadvantages, and
barriers to market entry.
The interventions
launched under Niryat Protsahan included:
Support for
Alternative Trade Instruments (Export Factoring) – This intervention promotes
export factoring as an affordable working capital solution for MSMEs. Interest
subvention of 2.75% will be provided on the factoring cost for eligible
transactions undertaken through RBI/IFSCA-recognised entities. Assistance is
capped at ₹50 lakh per MSME annually and will be processed through a digital
claim mechanism to ensure transparency and timely disbursal. Credit Assistance for E-Commerce
Exporters- To support exporters using digital channels, structured credit
facilities are being introduced with interest subvention and partial credit
guarantees. The Direct E-Commerce Credit Facility will provide support up to
₹50 lakh with 90% guarantee coverage. The Overseas Inventory Credit Facility
will extend support up to ₹5 crore with 75% guarantee coverage. Interest
subvention of 2.75% will be available, subject to an annual ceiling of ₹15 lakh
per applicant. Support for Emerging
Export Opportunities- This intervention enables exporters to access new or
high-risk markets through various shared-risk and credit instruments. These
structured mechanisms aim to strengthen exporter confidence and liquidity
flows…Further, the following interventions were launched
under Niryat Disha: Trade
Regulations, Accreditation & Compliance Enablement (TRACE)- TRACE supports
exporters in meeting international Testing, Inspections, Certifications and
other conformity requirements. Partial reimbursement of 60% under the Positive
List and 75% under the Priority Positive List will be provided for eligible
testing, inspection and certification expenses, subject to an annual ceiling of
₹25 lakh per IEC. Facilitating
Logistics, Overseas Warehousing & Fulfilment (FLOW)- FLOW supports
exporters in accessing overseas warehousing and fulfilment infrastructure,
including E-Commerce Export Hubs integrated with global distribution networks.
Assistance of up to 30% of approved project cost will be provided for a maximum
of three years, subject to prescribed ceilings and MSME participation norms. Logistics Interventions for Freight &
Transport (LIFT)- LIFT mitigates geographical disadvantages faced by exporters
in low export intensity districts. Partial reimbursement of up to 30% of
eligible freight expenditure will be provided, subject to a ceiling of ₹20 lakh
per IEC per financial year.
Integrated Support for Trade Intelligence & Facilitation (INSIGHT)-
Through these
coordinated financial and ecosystem interventions, the Government aims to
reduce cost of capital, diversify trade finance instruments, enhance compliance
readiness, address logistics constraints and strengthen overseas market
integration for MSMEs. 3
interventions — Market Access Support, Interest Subvention for Pre- and
Post-Shipment Export Credit, and Collateral Support for Export Credit — are
already under implementation. With this launch, 10 out of the 11 proposed
interventions under EPM are now operational.
Representatives from State Governments, Export
Promotion Councils and industry bodies including FIEO, EEPC, GJEPC, CII, FICCI,
PHDCCI, ASSOCHAM and NASSCOM welcomed the initiative and expressed support for
its effective implementation.